"Compare and contrast the bluest eye and the color purple" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Bluest Eye Thesis

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    Biswal‚ Priyadarshi. "Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye: A Study of Black Consciousness and Wounded Psyche." Labyrinth: An International Refereed Journal of Postmodern Studies 5.4 (2014): 96-102. Literary Reference Center Plus. Web. 23 Oct. 2016. BP 2: Topic Sentence (complete sentence) As complicated the subject of race can be‚ Morrison’s‚ The Bluest Eye‚ integrates racism not just from color‚ but also a socioeconomic issue. Three MSDS you will use (at least TWO MUST

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    The Color Purple

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    The role and mode of “God” The role and mode of God changes throughout the book The Color Purple as Celie develops as a result of different experiences. From her conversation with Shug her whole view of God changes and so do her feelings about what she can do. From a young age Celie has written to God and she believes that he has been listening. Celie confesses to both Shug and Nettie that she has stopped writing to God. She says “Anyhow‚ I say‚ the God I been praying and writing to is a man.

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    Racism in the Bluest Eye

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    The Bluest Eye Questions 1. The Bluest Eye provides numerous examples that show the idea that white is beautiful and black is ugly. These white beauty standards deform the loves of black women. There are many examples that white is superior like the white baby doll that was given to Claudia‚ the idea of Shirley Temple‚ how the light-skinned Maureen is cuter than the other black girls‚ and Mrs. Breedlove’s preference for the white girl over her own daughter‚ Pecola. The adult women learned to hate

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    Essay On The Bluest Eye

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    woman of color is the victim people are more likely to find a way to justify why she is being treated wrongly than to stand up for her. This type of feminism is called white feminism‚ in which mostly white women (women of color can also take part in this) fight for equality that revolves around the problems most white women face and fails to address the oppression of women of color and those who lack other privileges.White feminism is not feminism at all because it excludes women of color. In order

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    The Bluest Eye Analysis

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    Carter 3 Taylor Carter December 12‚ 2014 A6 Krygier The Bluest Eye The Bluest Eye is a tragic story about a young girl black girl‚ named Pecola. Pecola’s life is told from the point of views of herself‚ Claudia‚ and an omniscient narrator. Throughout The Bluest Eye‚ Pecola is told she is ugly from a very young age. She believes that the only way she can be beautiful and accepted is if she has blue eyes like the white actress‚ Shirley Temple‚ or the white dolls she gets every year for Christmas.

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    The Bluest Eye

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    For Toni Morrison‚ art cannot be effective without it being political. All good art has been political and the black artist has a responsibility to the black community. In her works‚ she aims at capturing "the something that defines what makes a book ’black.’ And that has nothing to do with whether the people in the books are black or not." She thinks that one characteristic of black writers is a quality of hunger and disturbance that never ends. Her novels "bear witness" to the experience of the

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    Racism in the Bluest Eye

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    Racism in “The Bluest Eye” Several examples of racism are encompassed in The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison. Characters who are members of the black community are forced to accept their status as the “others”‚ or “outsiders”‚ which has been imposed on them by the white community. In turn‚ blacks assign this status to other individuals within the lighter-skinned black community. In this novel‚ characters begin to internalize the racism presented by these people‚ and feel inferior. The stereotype

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    racism in The Bluest Eye

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    Unlike To Kill a Mockingbird‚ in which an African-American is persecuted by whites simply on the basis of skin color‚ The Bluest Eye presents a more complicated portrayal of racism. The characters do experience direct oppression‚ but more routinely they are subject to an internalized set of values that creates its own cycle of victimization within families and the neighborhood. The black community in the novel has accepted white standards of beauty‚ judging Maureen’s light skin to be attractive and

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    In Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye (1970) and Kendrick Lamar’s album To Pimp A Butterfly (2015)‚ both authors show how oppression manifests itself as internalized racism. The influence of the “Black Is Beautiful” cultural movement is present throughout the novel and the album. Throughout the novel‚ each character deals with oppression differently. It is understandable considering each individual has been raised in a different way. However‚ society is one of the main reasons that each one

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    Diction In The Bluest Eye

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    Pure Hatred Towards an Inanimate Object In Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye‚ the speaker’s disdain for the doll is made evident through the drastic changes in tone throughout the piece‚ and the speaker’s use of sentences with many clauses to draw attention to key points. The tone of the piece‚ revealed through the connotations of abstract diction‚ mirrors the speaker’s thoughts towards the doll. The tone of the piece starts pleasant‚ containing words with positive connotations such as “special” and

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