Bluest Eye Essay

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    Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home are both novels that employ a reflective narration of the past to address common themes of trauma, unorthodox family relationships, and sexuality. Although they demonstrate pronounced differences in setting and design, both stories utilize this retrospective narrative to expose masculinity’s stratified hegemony as a driving force of internalized shame, violence, and the death of self. Furthermore, it becomes clear that these shared themes

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    Another character who is effected by the standards of beauty during this time period is Geraldine. She does everything she can to make herself and her son, Junior, as white as she can. As she raised Junior, she “did not allow her baby, Junior, to cry. As long as his needs were physical, she could meet them” (Morrison 86). Geraldine and the women that Morrison describes that are like her, are just like the white women in their town. They put on a fake persona in order to make it look like they have

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    Racist Beauty Standards

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    In this novel, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, the author depicts a culture in which white people and white lifestyles are idealized and the standards for beauty are very generalized around whites. In this novel, the author questions the truths by which white standards of beauty are held and depicts the impact and growth it has on her characters and the long-term effects of these “beauty standards”. Claudia was much better able to handle rejecting the white, middle class America’s standards of beauty

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    However, Toni Morrison examines the theme of Identity confusion by analyzing Pecola’s struggle with abuse, racism, and low self-esteem. Each struggle exemplifies the concept of being black within a black world, and blackness in a predominately white world. The author achieves this by using multiple comparisons of various other characters that sympathize with Pecola, except they have a different experience in life. This novel was inscribed from a child and an adult’s perspective which helps portray

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    Toni Morrison’s novel The Bluest Eyes is about a young adolescent girl named Pecola who made no attempt to fight back against those who mocked her or damaged her body and mentality. Pecola’s peculiarness caused the people around her to become aware of her difference, which made them hate her for the ugliness that reflected in themselves. My opinion of this novel is that Morrison inserted a society where they used Pecola as a punching bag, and a scapegoat to illuminate the superficialness of perceived

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    Pecola's Innocence

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    In the novel The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, the psychological faults of Pecola become evident through her experiences and even more through her opposite in their actions and opinions, Claudia. In the novel, readers become aware of various injustices occurring to both characters and an insight to how the two deal with them. Pecola and Claudia both live in a society where innocence is not well maintained among children. Their development is dependent on their own abilities to handle cruelties and

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    Childhood Presented in To Kill a Mocking Bird by Harper Lee and The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison Childhood should be a time of great learning, curiosity, joy, playfulness and guiltlessness. The reality is that it can be a time of extreme vulnerability and dependency. The innocence and fragility of a child is easily manipulated and abused if not nurtured and developed. Family relationships are crucial in the flourishing of young minds, but other childhood associations are important too. These

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    gender, but the theory of naturalism as well: the idea that one 's social and physical environments can drastically affect one 's nature and potential for surviving and succeeding in this world. In this article, I will explore Toni Morrison 's The Bluest Eye from a naturalistic perspective; however, while doing so I will propose that because Morrison 's novels are distinctly black and examine distinctly black issues, we must expand or deconstruct the traditional theory of naturalism to deal adequately

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    Autumn Journals Mary Yocum How does the use of multiple perspectives change your understanding of the characters and plot in this section? The first part of this section is told by Claudia. In this part she describes her early memories and what it was like to grow up for her. In her description the reader starts to get an idea of how life for the black characters was at that time. Claudia tells about how she encounters the idealized standard of white beauty, both from her perspective as a child

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    Definition Essay Beauty

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    Someone’s appearance defines who they are because of how they look or what they wear. The book ‘the bluest eyes” by Toni Morrison it gives an example of how African Americans were viewed because of how they look like. “Colored people were neat and quiet: niggers were dirty and loud.” Beauty is not always about makeup and fashion. Beauty is someone is in general

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