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Love And Beauty In Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye

Decent Essays

Throughout Toni Morrison's novel The Bluest Eye, she captures, with vivid insight, the plight of a young African American girl and the American culture whose ideal is the quintessential blue-eyed, blonde haired woman. For Pecola Breedlove, blue eyes, blonde hair, and pale white skin is the definition of beauty; however, for Claudia MacTeer, blue eyes, blonde hair, and pale white skin are oppressive cultural standards. In The Bluest Eye, Morrison uses specific descriptions of Claudia and Pecola’s upbringings to juxtapose how the love and affection
Claudia receives from her family keeps her sane while the lack of it ultimately drives Pecola insane.
Both Claudia and Pecola live in the same town where African-Americans have considerably meager accommodations. Claudia lives in an house that is “old, cold, and green” while at night a “kerosene lamp lights one large room” (Morrison 10). From this description, the audience realizes the less than desirable living conditions Claudia is subjected to. While the poor exterior of Claudia's house illuminates the low socioeconomic class of Claudia’s family, Claudia is still able to reflect on how her mother transformed the hardships of life into something positive and even desirable. Claudia’s mother would sing “about hard times, bad times, and somebody-done-gone-and-left-me-times. But her voice was so sweet and her singing eyes so melty I (Claudia) found myself longing for those hard times, yearning to be grown without a thin dime to my

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