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Friday, October 14, 2016

Symbolism in The Bluest Eye

unalike many of the various books slightly racism that were published during Toni Morrisons time, Morrisons The Bluest Eye is singular because of the way it explores the lingering do of slavery, particularly self-hatred, rather than the more(prenominal) obvious problems of segregation. In TBE, the portentous individuals are obsessed with the ideas of whiteness, and cleanliness, which they have-to doe with with while people. This excessive soaking up stems from years of abuse and mistreatment. bingle of the more blatant ways this manifests itself is through the central motive of dolls. Many of the young girls adore and fixate on dolls, particularly their qualities and features. This is because the dolls posses the stereotypical qualities that disgraceful count represent physical knockout and stock-still perfection. However, not each the characters demonstrate the same office towards the dolls. While characters such as Pecola idolized the dolls, others such as Claudia establish a pixilated distaste for the dolls and their supposed perfection. Morrison contrasts the various attitudes towards dolls end-to-end her book to demonstrate the degeneration of Black self-esteem and theyre attitudes towards themselves. In many ways, many of the Blacks internalized ideas of white favourable position stem from a muniment of abuse. However, these convictions cause Blacks to lose their sniff out of identity and deny their aver race. One character describes it as so: You looked at them and wondered wherefore they were so uglythen you realized that is came from conviction, their conviction. It was as though some inscrutable and all-knowing master had accustomed each one of them a cloak of ugliness to give way and they had each accepted it without inquiry (Morrison 39). The Blacks grow up accept they are ugly and undesirable, even if no one in their life has ever told the the were so. This broken in self esteem and in some cases, self hatred, causes them to destructively idealize whiteness, which...

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