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    The Bluest Eye Symbolism

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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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    The Bluest Eye

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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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    Toni Morrison

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    through it and African-Americans who were living at the time. One of these writers was the Toni Morrison‚ the novelist‚ who intended to teach people about all aspects of African-American life present and past. Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye In the novel‚ The Bluest Eye‚ the author‚ Toni Morrison‚ tells the tragic story of Pecola Breedlove. Pecola longs for acceptance from the world. She is an innocent little girl‚ however‚ she is rejected practically by the whole world‚ and her own parents. Pecola

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    Racism in the Bluest Eye

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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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    Through a Child’s Eye: The Aftermath of Politically Institutionalized Oppression Oppression and its synonymous relatives lives beneath our noses‚ lingering in the air we breathe and manifesting itself in our lungs. Oppression is a pollutant that begins its work at dawn and ceases to take a vacation. It begins as an unnamed idea‚ a trojan horse of types‚ claiming to have multifunctional benefits created by its systematic approach. Exploding with casualties‚ it wreaks treachery. The notion of dissolvement

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    Irony In The Bluest Eye

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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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    Yulianti 1014025007/ English Literature 5A The shaping of character of Pecola through her family and her society Introduction The Bluest eyes is the work of Toni Morrison. In this novel we can see that there are many characters that are very interesting to analyze it. Because the characters are very characteristic. We can see at the main character of the bluest eyes‚ Pecola. Pecola has psychological problem that is very interesting to analyze. So in here I want to analyze the character of Pecola

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    In the book written by Toni Morrison‚ The Bluest Eye‚ our main character Pecola chances to build a stable identity are derailed by both outside influences‚ and internal conflicts. In the areas of outside reason‚ would include society its self at that time period of history‚ her environment which is hugely influenced by her parents and also how her parents view themselves‚ from especially their personal experiences‚ and last would be the fact what Pecola herself see herself in a certain image which

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    Essay On The Bluest Eye

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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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    Racism in the Bluest Eye

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    The Bluest Eye Questions 1. The Bluest Eye provides numerous examples that show the idea that white is beautiful and black is ugly. These white beauty standards deform the loves of black women. There are many examples that white is superior like the white baby doll that was given to Claudia‚ the idea of Shirley Temple‚ how the light-skinned Maureen is cuter than the other black girls‚ and Mrs. Breedlove’s preference for the white girl over her own daughter‚ Pecola. The adult women learned to hate

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