Bluest Eye Essay

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    uses African Literary Tradition in her novel, The Bluest Eye. Morrison writes with an erratic and non-linear pattern providing depth to her character’s backgrounds. She puts forth an effort to illustrate all sides of a story, even the side of the antagonist, Cholly, Pecola’s father. Morrison writes, “When Cholly was four days old, his mother wrapped him in two blankets and one newspaper and placed him on a junk heap by the railroad” (The Bluest Eye 132). It is important to realize that Morrison intentionally

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    Growing up and being convinced that one was ugly, useless, and dirty. For Pecola Breedlove, this state of longing was reality. Blue eyes, blonde hair, and pale white skin was the definition of beauty. Pecola was a black girl with the dream to be beautiful. Toni Morrison takes the reader into the life of a young girl through Morrison’s exceptional novel, The Bluest Eye. The novel displays the battles that Pecola struggles with each and every day. Morrison takes the reader through the themes of whiteness

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    The novel The Bluest Eye written by Toni Morrison is a very interesting book based on the background and the author and what is going on during the novel. Morrison has four main characters that keep the novel going and it’s interesting to readers. This novel is very developed and overall a very good book. Morrison shows this through overcoming struggles, characters growing, and how she uses literary devices within her writing. All four main characters in the story are very different in their own

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    Essay On The Bluest Eye

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    weakness, their insignificance, and how lowly they are viewed in society. Females can be seen as unworthy or nothing without a man if they are not advocating them and are constantly being treated differently from men. However, in the book, “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison, they live up to their reputations for how they view themselves. Specifically, being focused on women like Pecola, and Claudia. They are often questioning their worth from society’s judgement of beauty. Though one character, Frieda

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    Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye - Pecola's Mother is to Blame A black child is born and twelve years later that same child asks, "How do you get someone to love you?" The answer can't be found in Mrs. MacTeer's songs or in the Maginot Line's description of eating fish together, and even Claudia doesn't know because that question had never entered her mind. If Claudia had thought about it, she would have been able to explain to Pecola that although she didn't know exactly how you made someone

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    The Bluest Eye Analysis

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    The Standard of Beauty In the novel “The Bluest Eye”, by Toni Morrison depict the story of a young girl brainwash that the pigment of her skin color makes her ugly and worthless. She thinks that her life would be different if only she had blue eyes If only she had blue eyes. Women of color having learned to hate their own bodies because of their skin color even take this hatred out on their own children. Pecola has desire for blue eyes; she believes that everything she is experiencing has to do

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    Misdirected Anger Depicted in The Bluest Eye In The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison shows that anger is healthy and that it is not something to be feared; those who are not able to get angry are the ones who suffer the most.  She criticizes Cholly, Polly, Claudia, Soaphead Church, the Mobile Girls, and Pecola because these blacks in her story wrongly place their anger on themselves, their own race, their family, or even God, instead of being angry at those they should have been angry at: whites.

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    The Bluest Eye Toni Morrison's first novel The Bluest Eye takes place in Loraine Ohio in the 1940's, it is the story being told by Claudia MacTeer of an event that took place when she was child. The story centers around Pecola a 11year old young girl who is not seen or recognized due to her feature characteristics, she is described as black and ugly, when Pecola is raped and impregnated by her father the girls believe that no Marigolds bloomed that autumn because of the tragedy that drove their

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    The Bluest Eye Essay

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    In Toni Morrison’s novel, “The Bluest Eye”, a character named Pecola Breedlove had always been wishing to have blue eyes, because it was considered as pretty in the novel’s world. Also, a lighter skins African American, Maureen Peal, bullied the Pecola, who have darker skin, because Maureen Peal thinks herself is cute while Pecola is ugly. Similarly, Pecola always thought of herself in a negative way, in which, she calls herself ugly. On the other hand, Maureen Peal, think highly of herself, because

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    Perception is the process of selectively choosing and assigning meaning to information. The set of perceptions people own are a result of the selection, organization and interpretation of information. In Toni Morrison’s novel The Bluest Eye, the author effectively reveals the girl as an extremely developed character, despite her age. Morrison introduces the young girl as confident, innocent, and most importantly, familiar and comfortable with her identity and environment. Throughout the excerpt,

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