Life And Death Of The Libson Girls By Jeffrey Eugenides

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The detriment of institutional racism affected everyone specially Pecola, a young girl who longs for blue eyes in hopes to be as pretty as a white girl whom everybody lauds. Dialogue between Pecola and an assumable made up second character fills the second to the last chapter and devoids it of description. Vivid imagery describing the girls fills the book because of the narrator's attention to detail and Jeffrey Eugenides lyrical writing style. The reader is never informed of their names or their background because the life and death of the Libson girls engrossed the boys who directed the novel. Many points of view state that they do not exist as an entity and that they’re created by the intention of the observer. Their strict religious mother

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