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    Mackenzie Thurmond Dr. Rob. Bleil World Literature II April 25‚ 2014 Role and Identity “If there’s a book you want to read‚ but it hasn’t been written yet‚ then you must write it.” (Morrison). In reading Toni Morrison’s short story “Recitatif‚” there are several things that Morrison does for her readers that allow us to relate and make the story our own. Morrison is a prime example of how language and translation play a role in the reader’s experience and what the reader takes away from

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    Another example of knowing Freud’s psychoanalytic theory can be found in Toni Morrison’s Recitatif where readers can understand how people’s behaviors are founded from their past experiences and their actions are made unintentionally and the person may not even realize what they are doing. In her story‚ it may focus on race but Morrison actually shows the psychoanalytic behaviors from lack of care in each encounter between her main characters. For example‚ the first at St. Bonny’s was based off of

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    book titles that only have a small part to do with the actual book‚ but the title Jazz by Toni Morrison is significant throughout the whole book. This is because Jazz was a very popular music style in the 1920s‚ which is around the time the book is set. During that time‚ Jazz was very popular in the African American culture‚ this is significant because the main characters of the book are African American. Toni Morrison incorporates elements of Jazz music throughout the whole book‚ she does this by

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    The Banjo Lesson;

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    Appreciation The Banjo Lesson‚ by Henry Tanner‚ is an example of 19th century realism. As we can see realism is the attitude of accepting the situation you are in and preparing yourself mentally to deal with that situation. Henry tanner was a famous painter that liked to make simple but controversial paintings. Personally I think the man is a genius. So what does Henry Tanner and 19th century realism have in common? They collide when he makes his most famous painting‚ The Banjo Lesson. (This painting shows

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    Beauty and The Bluest Eye Toni Morrison’s novel‚ The Bluest Eye contributes to the study of the American novel by bringing to light an unflattering side of American history. The story of a young black girl named Pecola‚ growing up in Lorain‚ Ohio in 1941 clearly illustrates the fact that the "American Dream" was not available to everyone. The world that Pecola inhabits adores blonde haired blue eyed girls and boys. Black children are invisible in this world‚ not special‚ less than nothing

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    seasons to show how time passes. In many stories‚ you rarely notice the slight change in the weather or in seasons because of the actual story going on. For example‚ to add to the dread of someone’s death it normally rains or in extreme cases‚ snows. “Toni Morrison gives her poor jilted lover‚ Hagar‚ and encounter with cleansing rain”(Foster‚72) Snow can mean as much as rain. Snow can have two different meanings in literature. It can mean extreme sadness or the exact opposite. If in a story‚ someone

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    That quote is from the book‚ “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison. The story takes place at the end of the great depression. Claudia and Frieda MacTeer are two young girls that live with their very poor parents in Lorain‚ Ohio. The family takes in a border named Henry Washington and a young girl named Pecola. Pecola comes from a harsh family and is in love with Shirley Temple. She believes that being white is beautiful and that because she’s dark that she is ugly. When Pecola moves back with her family

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    Scars are often seen as a blemish‚ an indication of imperfection and a reminder of a painful past‚ but in the rights hands scars can also be made beautiful. Sethe‚ the female protagonists of Toni Morison’s novel and a former slave living in post civil war Ohio‚ is forced to reopen her scars as well as her traumatizing past when a mysterious young woman arrives on her porch. Inexplicably the woman‚ who claims to be called Beloved‚ is infatuated with Sethe and has the characteristics of Sethe’s daughter

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    Twentieth Century Literature‚ particularly novel is characterized by a major theme of anger which inherently exists in Toni Morrison’s masterpiece The Bluest Eye . Chloe Anthony Wofford‚ known as Toni Morrison‚ was born on February 18‚ 1931‚ in Lorain‚ Ohio‚ US to African American parents. Being African American‚ she has been raised to appreciate the Black culture. Besides‚ since her childhood‚ her parents have taught her to love reading and music; thus‚ she has become infatuated with

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    The bluest eye is a novel written by Toni Morrison. The novel took place majorly in the 1940s Lorain‚ Ohio when racism was still predominant and after the great depression. The Bluest Eye centers around Pecola Breedlove a young black girl who believes that whiteness is beauty and inherently denies the beauty of her own blackness. The novel intricately and blatantly narrates the lives of African-Americans during the 40s leading well into the 70s and even till now. Pecola’s dream of having this standard

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