Beauty In The Bluest Eye

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Mother Morrison, the only living winner of a Nobel Prize for literature in the United States, has a tendency to depict African American social context through all her writing. The novel “The Bluest Eye” demonstrates the hardships that a young African American girl goes through in a society that is dominated by Western European standards of beauty. The novel centers around a young girl named Pecola Breedlove. The novel begins from the perspective of two other little girls in her neighborhood that are about the same age as her. Their family takes in Pecola after her father tries setting their house on fire. While staying there she becomes obsessed with a piece of glass that has a picture of Shirley Temple on it. She idealizes Shirley Temple, however, Claudia- one of the other two little girls, does not. Pecola who is described as an ugly girl, believes that if she had blues eyes like those possessed by Shirley Temple, then maybe she too could be beautiful. Throughout the rest of the book, the reader learns about the rest of …show more content…

The Breedloves believed that they were ugly, particularly Pecola. Pecola believed that there was only one type of beauty, the beauty epitomized by Mary Jane, blond hair, blue eyes, and white complexion. Since she did not meet that criteria in her mind she was automatically excluded from being beautiful. The narrator says, “It had occurred to Pecola some time ago that if her eyes, those eyes that held the pictures, and knew the sights-if those eyes of hers were different, that is to say, beautiful, she herself would be different” If Pecola had the blue eyes, she would be beautiful, and if she was beautiful then she would feel worthy. Essentially, it is because of the distorted reality of oppressive whitewashed beauty, that Pecola feels inferior. She doesn't value herself and therefore is accepting of her unfulfilling life and poor

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