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The Bluest Eye By Toni Morrison

Decent Essays

A standard of beauty is established by the society in which a person lives and then supported by its members in the community. In the novel The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, we are given an extensive understanding of how whiteness is the standard of beauty through messages throughout the novel that whiteness is superior. Morrison emphasizes how this ideality distorts the minds and lives of African-American women and children. He emphasizes that in order for African-American women to survive in a white racist society, they must love their own race. The theme of race and that white skin is more beautiful is portrayed through the lives and stories told by the characters in the novel, especially the three girls Claudia, Pecola and Frieda. Through the struggles these characters have endured, Morrison shows us the destructive effect of this internalized idea of white beauty on the individual and on society.
The Bluest Eye takes place during a tumultuous time in America, segregation was still legal, and racial differences were apparent. The town in which the novel takes place, Lorain, Ohio, has a population that is considered ethnically unequal, even though the town was mostly integrated. This town is considered mostly interracial, where African-American’s attended the same schools as white children, and shopped at the same stores. Throughout the novel, Morrison portrays how vulnerable young African-American girls are as they are exposed to this implied white beauty and

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