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    Bluest Eye

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    The Bluest Eye Essay #4 by: Jason Berry EWRT 1B Instructor: C. Keen June 16th 2010 Toni Morrison the author of The Bluest Eye‚ portrays the character Pecola‚ an eleven year old black girl who believes she is ugly and that having blue eyes would make her beautiful‚ in such a way as to expose and attack “racial self- loathing” in the black community. Toni Morrison the author of The Bluest Eye‚ portrays the character Pecola‚ an eleven year old black

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    The Bluest Eye

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    Social Norms The characters in “The Bluest Eye” are exposed to social standards and norms. The book opens with an excerpt from the book “Dick and Jane”. This excerpt represents the perfect‚ ideal‚ suburban‚ white family. Each chapter in the book also begins with a quote from this book. This makes the lives of the black families in the book seem worse. The comparison of Dick and Jane’s family and life to that of the black families in the book demonstrates how the black families would compare themselves

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    Blue Eye

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    CONTEN TS • Introduction • Emotion mouse • Emotion and computing • Theory • Result • Manual and gaze input cascaded (magic) pointing • Eye tracker • Implementing magic pointing • Artificial intelligent speech recognition • Application • The simple user interface tracker • conclusion Introduction :Imagine yourself in a world where humans interact with computers. You are sitting in front of your personal computer that can listen‚ talk‚ or even scream aloud. It has the ability to gather information

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    The Bluest Eye

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    Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye: A look at Sexism and Racism Toni Morrison‚ the author of The Bluest Eye‚ centers her novel around two things: beauty and wealth in their relation to race and a brutal rape of a young girl by her father. Morrison explores and exposes these themes in relation to the underlying factors of black society: racism and sexism. Every character has a problem to deal with and it involves racism and/or sexism. Whether the character is the victim or the aggressor‚ they

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    The Evil Eye

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    Creative non fiction describes true experiences and is based on true facts and events‚ unlike many other genres. Racism is depicted during multiple occasions in “The Evil Eye” written by Wanda Coleman. The writer tells stories that have impacted her by using creative non-fiction as an attempt to raise our awareness of racism. Coleman is married to a white man‚ and not only are they judged by the people of his race‚ but by her people as well. “… Those who marry across barriers of class‚ colour and

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    Bluest Eye

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    At the end of chapter 8 in Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye‚ the reader is reminded of a graphic scene that was mentioned on the first page of the book between a father and his daughter. In this chapter‚ Cholly comes home very drunk and rapes his daughter‚ Pecola. While almost all of Morrison’s readers cannot understand‚ at the beginning of the book‚ how a man could impregnate his own daughter‚ they later start to grasp at why Cholly could do such a thing because of his past. Tragically‚ Cholly is

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    The Bluest Eye

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    Adult women have learned to hate the blackness of their own bodies. The person that suffers the most from the white beauty standards is Pecola. Pecola wants blue eyes not because it conforms to white beauty standards but because she wants to view different sights and pictures to escape reality. To Pecola‚ the color of one’s skin and eyes do influence the way one is treated. Pecola is beautiful because she is human‚ but this beauty is invisible to the community who has identified beauty with whiteness

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    The Bluest Eye

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    " The Bluest Eye Everywhere we go there are going to be stereotypes that can affect us in our daily lives. Even stereotypes from years ago are still sometimes present today. For years Caucasian blue-eyed dolls was considered the best and most perfect gift for every little girl. For this time period it was considered perfect but many girls did not have the features that the doll had. This in some cases would affect minority’s‚ who would come to think that their features such as dark skin‚ and

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    the bluest eye

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    Vanessa Mateo AP English The Beauty and Race Subjectivity in Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eyes In The Bluest Eye‚ author Toni Morrison uses a combination of race and beauty as factors that contribute to a culture’s creation of artificial scale of beauty. An establishment of an artificial scale of beauty showing how a race and culture values are easily being disallowed by the ideology of being the perfect beauty of a human being. Morrison uses characters such as Claudia Macteer

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    That Eye the Sky

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    you have to live with in this life” which are wise words coming from a child. Ort expresses himself through imagery and symbolism‚ an example is the sky. Ort refers to the sky in the last paragraph of the exposition‚ describing it as “one big blue eye” “just looking down at us”‚ which introduces the reader to Ort’s powerful insight into the world around him. Why does the Author use first person narrative? As Ort conveys the story‚ he is engaging the reader by providing them with personal insight

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