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    Beloved Essay

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    Beloved Essay Many believe that ghost come back to this world to haunt the living due to actions that they committed towards them while living. In Toni Morrison’s stream of consciousness novel Beloved Sethe a former slave at in Sweet Home committed infanticide. Eighteen years later the ghost of her deceived daughter‚ Beloved‚ still haunts Sethe and all the inhabitants of 124. Throughout Morrison’s novel‚ Beloved has brought suffering and pain to Sethe and Paul D through the author’s use of flashback

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    replies “I’ve never seen it and never will. But that’s what (Amy) said it looked like. A chokecherry tree. Trunk‚ branches‚ and even leaves. Tiny little chokecherry leaves. But that was eighteen years ago. Could have cherries too now for all I know" (Morrison 31). The tree is a symbol of the fact that Sethe’s history is literally always right behind her‚ even if she cannot see it. The tree is deep rooted in her skin‚ she feels like there’s a chance it could have grown as she experienced more pain and

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    racism in The Bluest Eye

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    relative affluence of the whites in the novel‚ reminds us of the link between race and class. More directly‚ the sexual violation of Pecola is connected to the sexual violation of Cholly by whites who view his loss of virginity as entertainment.Abstract: Toni Morrison’s fi rst novel‚ The Bluest Eye is a novel about racism‚ yet there are relatively few instances of the direct oppression. The Bluest Eye presents a more complicated portrait of racism. The characters are subject to an internalized set of

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    The Bluest Eye

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    Toni Morrison’s‚ The Bluest Eye‚ is about a girl named Pecola who wishes she had blue eyes so she looked beautiful. She was also black‚ lonely‚ and came from a poor family. In short‚ herself an society didn’t think she was pretty. Pecola prays for blue eyes cause she think that’ll make her prettier. Blue eyes are the accepted sign for being beautiful. Blue eyes are unique and are considered beautiful by most Americans an also most people in general. Pecola thinks she’s very ordinary and ugly

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    Bluest Eye Beauty

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    Claudia MacTeer Claudia suffers from the same mentality of most of the characters in the novel; she is insecure about materialistic things and knows that beauty belongs to white people. Claudia does not believe white is beautiful because she sees it‚ but because she is told and exposed to how others view beauty. Claudia believes white is beautiful because everyone who is older says it is. Claudia subconsciously defines beauty as having a good personality. When Claudia is given a doll for Christmas

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    Beloved's Eyes In Beloved

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    For the characters in Beloved‚ love is a dangerous emotion‚ causing them to rely on their eyes‚ a recurrent motif of the novel‚ to translate messages of longing‚ need‚ and love. As time passes and the characters’ relationships are developed‚ Morrison creates a clear distinction between emptiness and infinite expression in the eyes of Belove. In Beloved‚ to see is to love‚ and to be loved is to be seen. The most powerful and overbearing love present is the one that Beloved feels for Sethe‚ evident

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    In Toni Morrison’s novel‚ Beloved‚ Denver is the most dynamic character. She goes through a transformation from a young‚ shy‚ sensitive and dependent girl who has little interaction with others into an independent‚ motherly and courageous young woman. There are many events in Denver’s life that have lead to her change‚ but the two events that are biggest turning points are when Beloved first arrives‚ and when Denver leaves 124 for the first time by herself in eighteen years. These moments in her

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    notions‚ automatically coloring its perception of them. In this way‚ it molds its inhabitants just as much as its inhabitants mold society itself. Society is divided by what is considered acceptable and what is not‚ adapting to these concepts. As seen in Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye‚ every individual is somehow swayed by the norm‚ often through their attempts to join the majority. Because we view ourselves in relation to those around us‚ the influences of society are impossible to escape‚ especially when

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    explain‚ and describe how much she had suffered‚ been through‚ for her children‚ waving away flies in grape arbors‚ crawling on her knees to the lean-to. None of which made the impression it was supposed to. Beloved accused her of leaving her behind” (Morrison‚ 284). In the end‚ Sethe realizes that she must move on from the past. Although the relationship that Paul D and Beloved had was completely inappropriate‚ it allows Paul D to love again. Denver is enhanced by Beloved at first and is completely dependent

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    in society. This is especially true for women in society as they are taught what is considered beautiful and if they are different then they are ugly. There is some type of expectation for women to look a certain way. In “The Bluest Eyes” by Toni Morrison depicts beauty for women as being those with white light skin and blue eyes‚ better known as “white beauty” and those with dark skin to be ugly. So race is also playing a part in this because it’s saying that those who are black or of different

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