The Role Of Sense Perception In The Bluest Eye

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The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines sense perception as “perception by the senses as distinguished from intellectual perception”. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, introduces the readers to characters who mainly perceive the world through sense perception. A young black girl, Pecola, haunted by other characters’ perceptions of her, aligns beauty with the idealized image of blue eyes. The structure of the novel leaves the readers to only perceive Pecola through the eyes of other characters. In this method of perception, the disconnect between seeing and understanding could be seen, therefore by referencing Laura Mulvey’s “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema”, the damaging effects of this could be uncovered. The role of sense perception in The Bluest Eye is to show how this means of perception negatively impacts the black community, through how they see themselves and others based off the idealized image of beauty.
Perceiving the world through sense perception forced Pecola to seek a physical reason concerning why she was not considered to be beautiful. Pecola aligned the concept of beauty with blue eyes because it was a common thread she saw in people glorified as beautiful by the media and the people surrounding her. Beauty is …show more content…

Pecola was merely regarded as the “ugly black girl” by all she encountered. Rather than the other characters discovering that there was something wrong with how they were seeing, they choose to believe that there was something wrong with Pecola. Sense perception essentially claims that what you see is what you get: nothing exists beyond the surface. Sense perception serves as a counter to the idea of not judging a book by its cover because it is based only on external judgements. Therefore, it cannot be assumed that sense perception leads to intellectual understanding because sense perception provides the signal stop at the surface, and not everyone chooses to disobey that

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