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Themes In Toni Morrison's 'The Bluest Eye'

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Classic literature throughout time has controversial topics that make people feel uncomfortable. The Bluest Eye is a classic novel involving racism, rape, and vulgar language. The author, Toni Morrison, shares the topics through a beautifully written story that is extremely accurate and makes readers understand things from multiple perspectives. Therefore, the story has many positive qualities that give it the ability to be bold about uncomfortable topics and it should not be banned or challenged.
The Bluest Eye is a classic American novel that covers many topics of which are not often talked about in today's society such as racism and sexual harassment. In the beginning of the novel, it starts with the narrator, Claudia, and her older sister Frieda gaining a new member to their house, Pecola Breedlove. The plot is based on the terrible experiences of Pecola, who ends up being the main character. In the middle of the novel, it explains Pecola's parents' upbringing and why they act the way they do now as adults. After it explains their background, the book describes in extremely vivid detail what Cholly Breedlove does to his daughter.
Through the use of flashbacks, the author teaches empathy. In the novel it describes Cholly's childhood by saying "when Cholly was four days old, his mother wrapped him in two blankets and one newspaper and placed him on a junk heap by the railroad" (Morrison page 132). This quote shows how Cholly was abandoned with no parental figures in his

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