harmful when used irresponsibly because it can inhibit the brain’s functions including: disrupt memory‚ change brain physiology‚ and reduce self-awareness. Hence‚ Toni Morrison incorporates the detrimental consequences of alcoholism into her novel The Bluest Eye to show the destructive capabilities of alcoholism through the actions of her character‚ Cholly. His Aunt Jimmy raised Cholly‚ but unfortunately‚
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internet clips constantly. People are fed images of what "beauty" is supposed to be‚ but this idea of beauty is from the eyes of producers‚ models‚ musicians‚ and actors. It seems to me that only the people who are thought to have beauty are deciding what is beautiful. In Toni Morrison’s book The Bluest Eye there are many instances dealing with the idea of beauty‚ both through the eyes of some young girls and from an older point of view. For example‚ Claudia has a problem with white people who she believes
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The Bluest Eye By Toni Morrison Compare and contrast Claudia and Pecola in terms of their ability to fight injustice. How does this ability affect them later in the novel? It is not hard to notice the contrast between Claudia’s method to fight injustice and Pecola’s method. Claudia is a fighter and incredibly brave. She will not let the community that she lives in destroy her life. Therefore‚ she speaks up when she considers that something is unfair and wrong. Unlike Claudia‚ Pecola is
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delightedly. Pecola touched the scratched place on her face and felt tears coming. When she started for the doorway Junior leaped in front of her. “You can’t get out. You’re my prisoner‚”… Pg. 91-92 Geraldine Junior’s mother who does not pay much attention to Junior. She cares more about the cat than she cares about Junior. “Get out‚” she said her voice quiet.” you nasty little black… Get out my house.” This is what she said after Junior told her Pecola killed their cat. Pg.109 Polly Mrs.
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Errick Pope Pope 1 English 1102 Dr. Barker January 23‚ 2013 The Bluest Eye Toni Morrison’s‚ The Bluest Eye is a novel about the events that occurred in America during the 1940s. It is mainly about an African American family‚ the Breedloves‚ and their everyday struggle to cope with the situations they faced during that time. In the 1940s‚ African Americans had to deal with
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the forming of an appreciation of the poem. One needs to look hard therefore for the underlying turns of thought that might lead to a better understating o the springs of the this poem‚ where it comes from and where it goes to. Little attention has been given to the title of the poem. The title refers to a reverie which is a state in which one fancifully muses about something‚ a scene or a memory. The word "nocturnal" suggests either that the reverie takes place by night or that it is simply
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The Bluest Eye is a complex novel written by Toni Morrison‚ an African American literary theorist. Morrison evokes a society still plagued by the premise of slavery and the exposes this mode of white inferiority through The Bluest Eye. “Wicked people love wickedly‚ violent people love violently‚ weak people love weakly‚ stupid people love stupidly‚ but the love of a free man is never safe”‚ Morrison endows these last couple of sentences with a lyrical quality that makes the readers truly understand
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Common Core Research Paper Analysis on The Bluest Eye The Bluest Eye is a story that describes the life of a young African American girl named Pecola Breedlove whom was wrapped up in a life of poverty and hardship growing up and made to believe that she was ugly by the early 1940’s American society. Pecola Breedlove was a young girl growing up black and very poor in the early 1940s. During her life she was tormented and teased ugly by almost everyone that was a part of her life or whom she encountered
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Cynthia Ms. Stern AP Language Bluest Eye Passage 28 November 2012 Bluest Eye The passage is an excerpt from The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison. The overall purpose of this excerpt is to showcase both Claudia’s and Freida’s innocence as they struggle to comprehend—and fix—the tragedy of the situation Pecola was in. Our astonishment was short-lived‚ for it gave way to a curious kind of defensive shame; we were embarrassed for Pecola‚ hurt for her‚ and finally we just felt sorry for her. Our
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Self-hatred in the Bluest Eye After reading the Bluest Eye‚ the readers will be impressed by the atmosphere of depression and anxiety. One main reason for that is the self-hatred in the story‚ which is the black people’s common psychological condition. Almost each black people in the story have the feeling of self-hatred. And the self-hatred deep inside their heart usually revealed in different indirect ways. For instance‚ Claudia could not help dismembering and destroying the doll with
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