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The Bluest Eye By Toni Morrison Essay

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Racism is a social construct that has plagued America since its conception and is something that continues to do so to this day. In America’s earliest times racism presented itself in the concept of slavery. When that was abolished it presented itself in the Jim Crow Laws and separate but equal. Today racism presents itself in more discreet, sinister ways like mass incarceration, or the recent rash of police shooting of unarmed black teenagers. However, the most sinister way that racism affects us today and the way it infects those in Toni Morrison’s novel The Bluest Eye is the importance that is placed on the all-American family and how this excludes African Americans. Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye details how American ideals often contradict with the reality of what goes on in America and how vast the difference is between the two especially when it comes to race. In The Bluest Eye there are two principle families there is the Breedlove family, and then there is the family of the narrator, Claudia. Both the families were black, they were of the same socioeconomic status, they lived in the same area, and they both were grappling with the Eurocentric ideas of beauty that presented itself in the 1940s. However, there is one principle difference, while Claudia’s family is filled with love, support, and the overall care that is expected in a family dynamic, the Breedloves have none of this. Claudia had a mother who took care of her when she was sick, a father who was outraged

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