Bluest Eye Essay

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    The Bluest Eye Trauma

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    In the book The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison there was multiple instances in the story where child abuse is shown. For example, we see Soaphead Church molesting young children who have no clue what he’s doing to them but they see him as a good guy who gives them money and candy, and the most tragic case of child abuse in the book is when Cholly rapes his own daughter Pecola at the end of the book and the worst part is he did it twice. But to get to the point, there are multiple articles and books

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    The Bluest Eye Essay

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    3 February 2016 The Bluest Eye In order to fulfill her greatest desire of having blue eyes, Pecola decided to seek out Soaphead Church for help. Growing up “ugly” resulted in Pecola having internalized self-hatred. She often sat wondering and “trying to discover the secret of the ugliness, the ugliness that made her ignored and despised at school, by teachers and classmates alike.” To Pecola, eyes were everything; “everything was there, in them” (Morrison 45). Because her eyes were so important,

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    How do you tell a dark-skinned child she is beautiful in a society that yearns for European features? In The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison uses a young female character named Claudia, who would be around her age during this period of time, to narrate a story about the typical African-American family living during the 1940’s. The story takes place in Lorrain, Ohio, Morrison’s hometown, after the Great Depression and during World War II, a time when the enforcement of racial segregation and the Jim Crow

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    The Bluest Eye Symbolism

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    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

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    How and why is a social group represented in a particular way? A study into children of the Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison Outlines Illustrate how children are influenced by symbols of supposed trust and how that influences the way in which they perceive their roles in society. How Morrison uses the children to illustrate the perception of beauty according to skin colour and how beauty defines their importance as people. How Morrison compares and contrasts the attitudes of the three key child characters

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    In her novel The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison illustrates the varying yet interconnecting experiences of African-Americans in a prejudice society. The novel, told by Claudia and an omniscient third person narrator, contains a variety of literary techniques that help tell the story of Pecola, her family, and her town. One of these techniques Morrison often implements in this text is the use of metaphors. For instance, in the first chapter, Claudia explains “there were no marigolds in the fall of 1941

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    black/whiteness. Specifically, white people were positioned at the upper part of the hierarchy, whereas, African Americans were inferior. Consequently, white people were able to control and dictate to the standards of beauty. In her novel, ‘The Bluest Eye’, Toni Morrison draws upon symbolism, narrative voice, setting and ideals of the time to expose the effects these standards had on the different characters. With the juxtaposition of Claudia MacTeer and Pecola Breedlove, who naively conforms to

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    Love Doesn't Last The Bluest Eye is a novel based in Ohio on 1941. One of the narrators from of the novel is Claudia, she is a nine-year-old African-American girl that lives with her mother, father and her ten-year-older sister in an old green house, they didn't have much money but they made up for it with love. The family had so much love they accepted the main character of The Bluest Eyes, Pecola Breedlove in to their house, a 11 year old African American girl that hated the melanin in her skin

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    In Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye the purpose of this essay is to examine the cycle of abuse. The Bluest Eye is associated with violence, humiliation and immorality. It is about the pleasures and the sexual initiation. Sexual initiation is particularly violent, hatred and humiliating, leaving a last effect on characters. Parents blames their children for the traumatic sexual abuse. The Bluest Eye through an impact theoretical framework regarding Pecola, Frieda and Cholly. The point of all this is

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    “We were born to die and we die to live.” Toni Morrison correlates to Nelson’s quote in her Nobel Lecture of 1993, “We die. That may be the meaning of life. But we do language. That may be the measure of our lives.” In Toni Morrison’s novel, The Bluest Eye, she uses language to examine the concepts of racism, lack of self-identity, gender roles, and socioeconomic hardships as they factor into a misinterpretation of the American Dream. Morrison illustrates problems that these issues provoke through

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