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Comparing The Bluest Eye And The Color Purple

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Although there are, and have been for quite a long time now, races of many more colors than just black or white, mainstream society has characterized the idea of race being a social construct using only that shades that range between black and white. In that sense, the usage of an actual hue to represent race in books like The Bluest Eye or in movies like The Color Purple is radical. Colors, when a part of the racial equation, draw attention to the gravity of how pivotal a variable physical appearance is in an individual’s racial experience, and that perhaps is why they are such an integral part of said culture.
The female protagonists in Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and Steven Spielberg’s The Color Purple, are both black females whose environments have drilled into their minds the idea that they are unloved and unwanted in society because they are ugly. Despite their plight, it is not their treatment at the hands of society that dominates their stories but rather their …show more content…

When directing the movie, Spielberg was given the option of having the movie screened in black and white. He, however, chose otherwise because he understood that racial narration is incomplete and unjustified without the inclusion of color, and this sentiment was sifted into Shug Avery’s line of “… it pisses God off when you walk by the color purple in a field and don’t notice it.” The world man inhabits is a boundless field in which humanity is but a cluster of flowers such that walking past color, manifested in the scores of skin tones across the globe, without being able to marvel at it is then analogous to passing a field oblivious to the pigment saturated in its every pore. Color, be it on the petals of a floral bud or in the melanin of one’s skin, is for mankind to appreciate rather than to become the source of a subpopulation’s source of

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