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The Bluest Eye Beauty

Decent Essays

People usually feel like they are not good enough for society, so they strive to change themselves to please society’s expectations. In the novel The Bluest Eye, the author, Toni Morrison, uses point of view to reveal how the characters of Pecola and Claudia regard the standards of beauty in their society, having blue eyes and blonde hair, and how it affects them. From Pecola’s point of view, people are disgusted by her when they see her ugliness. She spends “long hours [...] looking in the mirror, trying to discover the secret of the ugliness” feeling bad for herself because that ugliness makes “her ignored and despised” (45). To fix her ugliness, Pecola thinks that she needs to have blue eyes because “if she looked different, beautiful, maybe Cholly would be different and Mrs. Breedlove too” (46). Pecola also expects that her change will adjust other people’s image of herself as well, making them less disgusted by her. Having these altered …show more content…

Claudia does not understand why people have to be perfect to be liked and does not know why people can not be themselves. It seems as though “all the world [has] agreed that a blue-eyed, yellow-haired, pink-skinned doll was what every girl child treasured[,]” yet Claudia hates the dolls (20). She thinks they are “uncomfortable [...and the] lace on the cotton dress irritated any embrace” (20). Instead of loving a doll, Claudia only wants to dismantle it. She wants to tear it apart to see why it is so intriguing to everyone and what is special about it. In this way, Claudia is a rebel to the standards of beauty because she resists and does not conform to them. Although Claudia does accept that society has these standards, she still thinks of herself as pretty and accepts herself for who she is. She feels “comfortable in [her] skin” and does not need to live up to the standards of beauty

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