"Toni Morrison" Essays and Research Papers

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    What does Claudia’s destruction of white baby dolls say about her relationship to the ideal of whiteness? In Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye‚ we are presented with ideals of what it is to be black and how it is to be white and how society’s constructions of the ‘ideal’ human affects characters within this novel. Claudia Macteer is a young African-American girl who struggles with these ideas and societies notion of perfection. Claudia battles with her own identity and demonstrates her frustrations

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    with women‚ personal friends like Orilla Miller and Mary Painter and with literary colleagues such as Maya Angelou and Toni Morrison‚ despite his ongoing pursuit of an ideal "romantic" relation with a man (never found)‚ a pursuit that seems rooted in the absence of his biological father and his stepfather’s brutal rejection of him. Pulitzer and Nobel prize-winning author Toni Morrison (Beloved)‚ one of the most significant writers this country has ever produced‚ has said of Baldwin‚ "You gave me a language

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    Beloved Symbolism Essay

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    Toni Morrison effectively provides reasons for the behaviour of her magical realism and gothic horror novel characters via her style of writing and the representation of them. Beloved is mainly written in third-person omniscient. However‚ Morrison’s novel is written in a constant flux‚ changes in point of view and narrators. This in course outcomes to repetition used to reveal other perspectives and the importance of key events‚ as well as to carry out a main symbol or notion. Beloved is filled with

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    over others. Power ultimately leads to disempowerment with the transformation of an individual to the stereotypical views of society. This concept of power is explored in both ’Othello’ a play written by Shakespeare in the Elizabethan period and in Toni Morrison’s ‘The Bluest Eye’. The Shakespearian tragedy‚ establishes Othello as articulate‚ charismatic and self-assured. Othello exerts power in the means of military command. He has the power of heroic achievement and storytelling that makes

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    Beloved and the Past

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    Faulkner’s Sound and the Fury details the lives of the Compson brothers whose lives become miserable as they are unable to move onto the past. Beloved by Toni Morrison takes it one step further and discusses ex-slaves attempting to recover from this traumatic past in different ways. However‚ simply than just ignoring their past‚ Beloved argues that to overcome a traumautic past we must confront the past and move towards the future. The past helps to construct our identity as seen by Denver’s obsession

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    Symbolism In Sula

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    Toni Morrison’s novel Sula(1973) uses symbolism to disclose important details about the plot and characters.Furthermore‚ Toni Morrison is an Ohio native ‚ but she received her bachelor’s degree in English at Howard University and her masters degree at Cornell University. She is a recipient of The Nobel Prize in Literature and many more honorable awards. After finishing school‚ Morrison had an academic career at many schools such as: Southern Texas University‚ Howard University‚ State University of

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    Sula Study Guide

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    metaphorically‚ instead of literally. Because the novel is so short (174 pages) you need to read carefully. Discussion questions: 1. Sula is in many ways a study of opposites (think about characters‚ setting‚ and themes) Find an example where Morrison explores these opposites- how do they play off each other? What is the author trying to say? 2. Also consider how men are portrayed in the novel. Think about male characters‚ like Boy Boy‚ Tar Baby‚ Plum‚ Chicken Little‚ Shadrack‚ and Ajax.

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    Harry Potter Hour 6 Female Identity in Literature 18 October 2010 The Role of Motherhood in Sula by Toni Morrison As seen by many different mothers in the novel Sula by author Toni Morrison‚ mothers play an important part in kid’s life‚ shaping how they view different beliefs in the world and setting up values in their child. Every individual’s life is shaped by personal relationships they have with others. The mother and child relationship greatly affects the identity development in the

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    Parental guidance and support are key components of the foundation of a child’s growth and development. Without either‚ a child cannot grow and develop properly. In her novel The Bluest Eye‚ Toni Morrison examines the effect of different mothers on their respective children through the characters of Mrs. MacTeer and Mrs. Breedlove. Throughout the novel‚ both characters express their thoughts and feelings through words‚ with Mrs. MacTeer having a few fussy soliloquies and Mrs. Breedlove having a few

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    Twyla vs Hazel

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    perceived as such. Morrison and Bambara have written two‚ very easily relatable stories of a couple of girls who are stuck right in the middle of this very struggle. The characters Hazel and young Twyla bare resemblance in numerous ways. Both young ladies are very young‚ have very naïve views of the world‚ and have been disappointed by an adult in their lives. In Recitatif‚ Twyla’s young age is revealed early on: “We were eight years old and got F’s all the time.” (Morrison 130) Hazel’s youth becomes

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