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The Bluest Eye Symbolism

Decent Essays

Unlike other books on the subject of racism that were published at the time of Toni Morrison, Morrison’s “The Bluest Eye” is exceptional because of the manner in which it addresses the persistent effects of slavery, mainly self-hatred, instead of the most apparent problems of isolation. In this book, black characters are infatuated with the idea of what white represents. Being that this book highlights the problems of racism and segregation, the author employs a number of symbols to illustrate his point. One of these symbols used by Toni Morrison is the blue eyes. In the book, the characters are obsessed about the blue eyes and what it represents to each of them.
First, the main concept demonstrated in this book is superiority. The symbols the author uses are intended to exemplify the dominance of the white population over the black. This dominance is brought out in terms of perfection and beauty. According to Morrison, “life has objects that are the standards of beauty or perfection” (Morrison 30). In this regard, she uses the blue …show more content…

The cat having the blue eyes symbolizes the idea that the whites are not who the Blacks think them to be. In fact, they are as equal as the Black people. For instance, the cat in elegant environment died after a male child knocks him on the hard wall. This shows that the fate of the white man and the Black man are the same and that they are both vulnerable and can meet the same fate despite the elegant surroundings, the good life and the beauty the Black man thinks the white man possesses. Also, Morrison recognizes that he Blacks have gone too far in idolizing the whites by saying “…we have dropped our seeds in our own little pot of black dirt…” (Morrisson 9). He tries to tell the Black to at least have a high regard for their dirt rather than admiring the other perfect

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