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Essays from FratFiles.com
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    The Bluest Eye. ... What made people look at them and say, "Awwwww," but not for
    me."(pg. 24) The Breedlove's are another example of beauty in The bluest Eye. ...

  2. Bluest Eye

    Bluest Eye. Toni Morisson's novel The Bluest Eye is about the life of the Breedlove
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  3. Bluest Eye

    Bluest Eye. Toni Morisson's novel The Bluest Eye is about the life of the Breedlove
    family who resides in Lorain, Ohio, in the late 1930s. ...

  4. An Impressionistic View Of The Bluest Eye

    An impressionistic view of The Bluest Eye. Toni Morrison's book The Bluest Eye was
    a book that this author had to force himself to finish reading. ...

  5. The Bluest Eye

    The Bluest Eye. Toni Morrison's novel "The ... American aesthetics. Bishop, John.
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The Bluest Eye

Submitted by coco157 on January 7, 2007

Category: Book Reports
Words: 619 | Pages: 3
Views: 271
Popularity Rank: 42,826
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All little black girls try to grow up into healthy women with positive self-images—despite the fact that white society seems to value and love only little girls with blue eyes, yellow hair, and pink skin. Today, most black girls survive the onslaught of white media messages, but even today, some fail. Pecola, a little black girl in the 1940s, does not survive. She is the "broken-winged bird that cannot fly."

Tormented and even tortured by almost everyone with whom she comes into contact, Pecola never fights back. If she had had the inner strength of Claudia and Frieda, she would have been able to counter the meanness of others toward her by assuming a meanness of her own. She does not. She is always the victim, always the object of others' wrath. Pauline abuses Pecola when she accidentally spills the cobbler all over the floor of the Fishers' kitchen, Junior tricks her into his house for the sole purpose of tormenting her, Geraldine hurts Pecola's feelings when she throws Pecola out of her house and calls her "black," as if to insult her, and Mr. Yacobowski degrades her by refusing to touch her hand to take her money. The school-boys torment Pecola about her ugly blackness, Maureen buys her an ice cream cone in order to "get into her business," and she is psychologically abused by the degrading conditions under which she and her brother, Sammy, live as they watch their parents abuse one another.


Pecola has never had proper clothing or food, and she is eventually put out of her own home because her father starts a fire in one of his drunken stupors and burns down the house. Soaphead Church uses her to kill a dog that he doesn't have the courage or resolve to kill himself. Cholly abuses Pecola in the most dramatically obscene way possible—and never once does Pecola fight back. She might have yelled back at the boys who tormented her after school the way Frieda did; she might have thrown her money at Mr. Yacobowski when he...

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