Bluest Eye Essay

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    Michelle Foy Professor Alicia Defonzo English Banned Books 395 October 2, 2015 The Bluest Eye Rather than presenting the traditional ‘black versus white’ racism, The Bluest Eye depicts the ways in which internalized racism affects black women. Throughout the novel, understood standards of beauty reinforce the supposed superiority of physical features that are associated with whiteness. This internalized racism that favors white beauty encourages characters in the novel to aspire to look white. In

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    English 1, Cornerstone 2: Chart 1.2 Write your essay below. One of Toni Morrison’s nationally bestsellers, The Bluest Eye, uses contrasts to introduce and develop central ideas about truth and beauty. Specifically, Morrison uses the perceived “bad, false, and ugly” to illuminate the good, the true, and the beautiful. For example, she juxtaposes the idea of a perfect, ideal home where things live happily and grow bountifully with the idea of a run-down, impoverished home where people simply survive

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    her life. Joy is living and understanding the beauty of life. Mass, popularized media has miss defined what is joy and beauty. Peculiar Pecula was bounded by the society’s romanticism for white skin and blue eyes. In The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, Pecula believes if she’s granted blue eyes she will be beautiful. Media influences the youth. Pecula is a poor Black girl existing in the height of the segregated and violent USA.

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    The Tree. This quote relates with many of the focal themes of The Bluest Eye, such as internalized racism, colorism and white supremacy. Malcolm X’s speech and Toni Morrison’s, The Bluest Eye both highlight self hatred and white supremacy, as well as the effects it has had on the black community. Pecola Breedlove, the protagonist of The Bluest Eye, feels insecure about her features: “Each night, without fail, she prayed for blue eyes. Fervently, for a year she had prayed. Although somewhat discouraged

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    Characterization maneuvers by Toni Morrison Pecola Breedlove in The Bluest Eye is a curious, young and innocent girl who tries to understand things that are even more complex than she thinks. A wondering eleven years old girl who is not near to recognizing the world she lives in; Pecola wants to be able to be something that she thinks is unreachable without the need of any special trait, and she does whatever she thinks it takes to achieve it. Toni Morrison created a character who is constantly

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    tolerated”(Eifert 69). In the novel, “The Bluest Eye”, there are characters’ such as, Pecola, Cholly Breedlove, and Junior whom all seem to experience a desire for acceptance from someone else during their adolescence, but they do not receive it. As these characters go on in the story they change significantly due to their lack of acceptance, and their change is what makes them struggle throughout the novel as they get older. In Morrison's novel, “The Bluest Eye”, it shows the characters’ Junior, Pecola

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    Firdaus. By taking away a woman’s ability to choose, it is oppressing her. If you have a voice, you have power, which is why there is a power struggle of this proportion among women, because their voice is stolen from them. The Bluest Eye. To complicate Firdaus’ story, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison tells the story of another girl’s life. Pecola was born and raised a poor, powerless, Black girl. Her power struggle is different, it is more internalized. Pecola grew up in an abusive household, where she

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    The Bluest Eye written by Toni Morrison, depicts how African American women are affected by the American setting. The book shows how whiteness is superior in the community, which poses a divergent thinking of black women’s beauty. The setting and time in the book predispose Precola as being the bottom of the ladder, in being a minority and a women. Claudia was given a white doll, which symbolized the white being superior. The merchandises sold and advertisements of white beauty at the time period

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    The Character of Cholly in The Bluest Eye   Morrison has divided her portrayal of a fictional town of blacks, which suffers from alienation and subjugation, into four seasons.  I believe that her underlying message is to illustrate the reality of life's travails: the certain rhythms of blessings and tragedies.  Some blacks understand and acccept this philosophy and Morrison's use of the seasons portrays and echoes the bible verse, "To every thing there is a season, and a time

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    Set in the 1940s, during the Great Depression, the novel The Bluest Eye, by Toni Morrison, illustrates in the inner struggles of African-American criticism. The Breedloves, the family the story revolves around a poor, black and ugly family. They live in a two-room store front, which is open, showing that they have nothing. In the family there is a girl named Pecola Breedlove, she is a black and thinks that she is ugly because she is not white. Pecola’s father, Cholly Breedlove, goes through humiliated

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