Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Enlightened by Toni Morrisons The Bluest Eye :: Bluest Eye Essays
Enlightened by Toni Morrisons The Bluest Eye   Over the course of our study of the American novel, we have experienced a kaleidoscope of components that help define it. We traveled back in time to learn what kinds of novels were being written and how they were being written. We were introduced to the likes of Harold Frederics Theron Ware, Henry Jamess Dr. Sloper and Catherine, and Nathaniel Hawthornes Blithedale Romance. We saw, through these novels and characters, how literary productions of the past affects literature of today.   We also read novels from various regions of North America. We had a glimpse of northern writers and their culture such as Alice Munro, and her stories of Canada. We sampled Willa Cather who gave us a taste of the early southwest through Fathers Latour and Vaillant.   We read about different religious ideals, from Therons Methodism to Father Latours Catholicism, to Hazel Motes The Church of Christ without Christ, to Jonahs (futuri stic) Bokononism each religion, in its own modal value, reflecting a different feeling of American religious zeal. And we have heard from a number of southern writers like OConnor, Faulkner, and Porter. We begin, through characters like Miranda and Anse, to glimpse a southern language and way of living.   It seems only fitting now, that we be introduced to another element of the American novel ethnic culture. The addition of Toni Morrisons The Bluest Eye is the perfect choice. Through the voices of her black characters, she reveals a tolerant spectrum of black culture during the 1930s and 1940s.   We get a glimpse of the middle class through Claudia and her family, who maintain a sense of dignity and pride. In the first chapter, she tells us, organism a minority in both caste and class, we moved about anyway on the hem of life, struggling to consolidate our weaknesses and hang on, or to shade singly up into the major folds of the garment (17).   We encou nter the desperately poor through the Breedlove family, Cholly, Pauline, and Pecola, each choosing a different means to escape the harsh ingenuousness of their lives. For example, Pecola dreams of having blue eyes, then she would be accepted, loved, respected, and beautiful.
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