24‚ 2015 AP Language & Composition - ELA III Essay For my AP Language & Compositions ELA III Essay I chose the book‚ The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison. The main theme established by the author is that believing european features are the epitome of beauty. Having blonde or ginger hair‚ blue eyes‚ and pale white skin made you beautiful‚ but if you were to have curly hair‚ brown eyes‚ and dark skin then you are not beautiful‚ those features made you ugly. You are to be mocked by peers‚ family‚ and everyone
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In the novel‚ The Bluest Eye‚ by Toni Morrison‚ Claudia Macteer is depicted as the polar opposite of the novel’s main protagonist‚ Pecola Breedlove. Whilst Pecola is surrounded by constantly fighting parents and is even victimized by one of her parents‚ Claudia was able to grow up in a stable household with loving parents that support both of their children‚ Claudia and Frieda. Claudia also has a very strong demeanor; she often takes action in many of the plots throughout the novel. Pecola‚ on the
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The Author and His or Her Times Toni Morrison was born in February 18‚ 1931 and is still living. When she taught at Howard University she spent her free time to write her book The Bluest Eye‚ which was written in 1970 and has received multiple awards such as the Pultzer Prize and Nobel Prize. She is African American and is the second oldest of four children and had parents that were not as financially stable compared to other families in her time. Her father had to work several jobs and her mother
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literature. In fact‚ they can tell a history of a people within a novel. According to Terry Eagleton‚ Marxist criticism is concerned with the symbolic meanings of a story as a product of a certain history. (Eagleton‚ 2) In Toni Morrison’s novel The Bluest Eye‚ the soil and the marigolds are
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For Toni Morrison‚ art cannot be effective without it being political. All good art has been political and the black artist has a responsibility to the black community. In her works‚ she aims at capturing "the something that defines what makes a book ’black.’ And that has nothing to do with whether the people in the books are black or not." She thinks that one characteristic of black writers is a quality of hunger and disturbance that never ends. Her novels "bear witness" to the experience of the
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Biswal‚ Priyadarshi. "Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye: A Study of Black Consciousness and Wounded Psyche." Labyrinth: An International Refereed Journal of Postmodern Studies 5.4 (2014): 96-102. Literary Reference Center Plus. Web. 23 Oct. 2016. BP 2: Topic Sentence (complete sentence) As complicated the subject of race can be‚ Morrison’s‚ The Bluest Eye‚ integrates racism not just from color‚ but also a socioeconomic issue. Three MSDS you will use
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Racism in “The Bluest Eye” Several examples of racism are encompassed in The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison. Characters who are members of the black community are forced to accept their status as the “others”‚ or “outsiders”‚ which has been imposed on them by the white community. In turn‚ blacks assign this status to other individuals within the lighter-skinned black community. In this novel‚ characters begin to internalize the racism presented by these people‚ and feel inferior. The stereotype
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The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison. 224 pp. New York: Holt‚ Rinehart and Winston. $8.95. The Bluest Eye‚ set during the 1940s after the end of the Great Depression in Lorain‚ Ohio‚ tells the heartbreaking story of eleven year old Pecola Breedlove‚ who perpetually prays for blues so she can be as beautiful and loved as blue-eyed‚ white American children. Pecola believes that she’s destined to live a tragic life due to her perceived ugliness‚ which is constantly reinforced by the way the people in her
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The three main characters in “The Bluest Eye”‚ are three young black girls. One of the three notices the white media‚ from Shirley shirley temple to the Mary Janes’ candy wrappers‚ that surrounds them. She gets irritated and angry that the only good roles models she has ever known are white
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The Bluest Eye depicts the social conditions and psychology of black citizens in post-World War II United States. This excerpt‚ situated in the Autumn part of the book‚ introduces the reader to a family‚ the Breedloves‚ part of whom is the protagonist‚ Pecola. The point of view is omniscient‚ enabling the author to describe the family‚ their house and state of mind. This extract has several layers of meaning : it depicts the physical‚ then moral conditions of the Breedloves‚ but also sheds light
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