Toni Collette

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    ability to choose, it is oppressing her. If you have a voice, you have power, which is why there is a power struggle of this proportion among women, because their voice is stolen from them. The Bluest Eye. To complicate Firdaus’ story, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison tells the story of another girl’s life. Pecola was born and raised a poor, powerless, Black girl. Her power struggle is different, it is more internalized. Pecola grew up in an abusive household, where she witnessed her father’s power over

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    powerful scenes are flashbacks, past experiences that characters come face to face with. What makes these flashbacks so important is that they help make the reader understand why the characters interact with each other the way they do. In Beloved, Toni Morrison uses a loose structure and weaves flashbacks into everyday life to create a connection through which readers can better understand the character’s past. In the beginning of the novel, the reader is introduced to the idea of flashbacks, which

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    Recitatif, by Toni Morrison, shows how this tragic situation was present just thirty years ago. This story takes place in the 1980’and concerns itself of the story of Roberta and Twyla, and their conversations which often involved questioning the identity of Maggie. Similarly, Party Down At the Square, by Ralph Ellison, shows a brutal murder of an African-American boy in the center of a town. Witnessed by a young white boy; this exposure of such violent racism teaches him to accept racism. Toni Morrison

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    Beloved is a novel by Toni Morrison based on slavery after the Civil War in the year 1873, and the hardships that come with being a slave. This story involves a runaway captive named Sethe, who commits a heinous crime to protect her child from the horrors of slavery. Through her traumas, Sethe runs from the past and tries to live a normal life. The theme of Toni Morrison’s story Beloved is how people cannot escape the past. Every character relates their hard comings to the past through setting, character

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    For decades there has been an ongoing discussion on society’s standards of beauty and what makes someone beautiful. In Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye she challenges white standards of beauty. Just like today, the society in Loraine, Ohio establishes a standard of beauty, and this beauty is defined as being as close to white as possible, having blonde hair, blue eyes, and a “Jack and Jill” family. Most of the characters in The Bluest Eye attempt to conform to society’s standards (complicating this

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    Freeman McLean April 22, 2014 ENGL 112.003 African-American Communities in Beloved Thesis: Toni Morrison focuses on negative impact of slavery on the well-being of African American communities throughout her novel Beloved by depicting the damage done, its effects on individual characters, and the renewal of community. 1. The enforcement of slavery has destroyed black communities and families 1. Families throughout Beloved were split due to slavery 2. The community of 124

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    Themes In Recitatif

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    Recitatif was written by Toni Morrison, which is a profound narrative, which I believe was meant to invite and let readers wondering to search for a buried connotation of the experiences that the main characters, which are Twyla and Roberta are face as children, and as their reunited again as adults, which some of the story’s meaning and values involving around race, friendship and the abandonment began to emerge as the plot thickens, and more messages became hidden and remain unrecognized even until

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    In the novel Beloved by Toni Morrison the character Sethe is faced with the traumatic experience of having to return to slavery at Sweet Home, in order to save her children she attempts to kill them. She succeeds in killing one by cutting the infant’s throat with a hacksaw. This “rough choice” revolves around the novel on whether or not, the choice was right or wrong. Sethe’s tough choice between the right or wrong in the murder of her child is right and was necessary for her to insure the safety

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    Racism In The Bluest Eyes The Bluest Eye tells a tragic story of a young girl named Pecola who desperately wishes for beautiful blue eyes. Pecola believes that the only way she will ever be beautiful is if she has blue eyes. This story takes place in the 1970’s, a time where African Americans were second class citizens in society. They were often exploited and dehumanized because of the way they looked, and this will leave a long lasting effect. Americans would often think that the only way to

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    is almost the complete opposite of Mr. MacTeer. He is “a renting black, having put his family outdoors, had catapulted himself beyond the reaches of human consideration. He had joined the animals; was indeed an old dog, a snake, a ratty nigger” (Toni 18). He is drunkard and without a job. After he rapes his own daughter for the second time, he escapes outside the city. He is an irresponsible man and father who did not take care of his children or provide for them an appropriate home and food. Mr

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