Bluest Eye Essay

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    vvPecola’s Eyes and Vision Tony Morrison is a famous, exciting, American writer, describes as a major figure of the entire African American nation within the American community. “The Bluest Eye” published in 1970, is one of the most impressive novels of the author describing the Great American Depression. The contexts and the structure of the story looks as if it was written for children. This realistic story describes the manner of life and reality of the African American, suffering form the pressure

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    In the novel, The Bluest Eye (1970), Toni Morrison introduces us to three young girls who have different perspective among the 1930s child film star Shirley Temple. Although Frieda McTeer, the older sister of Claudia McTeer admires Shirley, and the sisters' friend Pecola Breedlove has an obsession with Shirley, Claudia hates the actress with a passion. Even though Freida may like Shirley, because society loves Shirley and she is suppose to follow what society values and admires, being the oldest

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    Family Relationships in Morrison's The Bluest Eye “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison, is a story about the life of a young black girl, Pecola Breedlove, who is growing up during post World War I. She prays for the bluest eyes, which will “make her beautiful” and in turn make her accepted by her family and peers. The major issue in the book, the idea of ugliness, was the belief that “blackness” was not valuable or beautiful. This view, handed down to them at birth, was a cultural hindrance

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    The Bluest Eyes

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    “The Bluest Eyes” by Toni Morrison centers on a character name Pecola Breedlove. Pecola is an eleven year old black girl whom the story revolves. Pecola role is the protagonist. she is abused by almost everyone in the novel and eventually suffers two traumatic rapes.Pecola is a fragile and delicate child when the novel begins, and by the novel’s end, she has been almost completely destroyed by violence. I pick Pecola because I can relate to her. Through Pecola Breedlove’s lonely,sensitive,and imaginative

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    The Bluest Eye:  Dying to Fit In         Claudia MacTeer in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye looks longingly upon society from the outside. Growing up the youngest in the family as well as in a racial minority leaves Claudia feeling excluded and left out. She desires a place within the group society has formed without her. She desires to fit in and be accepted. Claudia desperately wants to experience life to the fullest. She does not want to miss out

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    In the following text of Toni Morrison “The Bluest Eye” and the movie “The Color Purple”, blacks are portrayed as being ugly and less than compared to the white society. Writers Morrison and Walker depict the everyday issues that young African girls would face during that particular time period. In regards to this, protagonists Celie and Pecola are viewed struggling with the dominance of men, beauty, and identity. Throughout this paper I will discuss these themes in an effort to illustrate how each

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    The Bluest Eye

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    The Bluest eye would be described as influential to all women who profoundly admire the white race. If the bluest eye were to be analyzed by me, I would say its primary characters such as Pecola are obsessed with thinking of herself having shade of blue in her eyes and other traits that dazzle her. Other characters in the book would also envy people who carried those physical traits. An essential point that moves the audience reading the book, is that those African American girls had lack of love

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    information so we can learn. We gain most of our information through trial and error. Toni Morrison plays on the process of human growth in her novel “The Bluest Eye”. Frieda and Claudia are naive about what it mean to be “ruined”. Pecola doesn’t understand that she shouldn’t go into strangers homes. Pecola doesn’t understand that she can not change her eye color. Morrison was trying to say the adolescence is very naive. Frieda and Claudia are naive about what it mean to be “ruined”.“‘I don’t want to

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    The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison narrates the lives of two families, the MacTeer family and the Breedlove family. The novel digs into the themes of love, envy, and weakness, while maintaining a thick and interesting plotline. These themes are conveyed thoroughly through Morrison’s literary style. Toni Morrison’s powerful writing and structural techniques add depth to the novel, enhancing certain emotions while developing a riveting plot. The way that Morrison tells the Dick and Jane story creates

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    sheltered and unspoken truth that everyone to some extent is racist. “In Morrison’s first novel, The Bluest Eye, instead of establishing a home where race doesn't matter a home which she dreams of, she creates just the opposite” (koachar 1). The middle class black society and the lower class black society, for example, are quite different from each other and are constantly conflicting. In “The Bluest Eye” , Morrison distinguishes these divisions and their tensions through characters like Geraldine, Junior

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