The Bluest Eye by Toni Morisson’s
In The
Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison tells the story of a little black girl who thinks
that if she can live up to the image of the blue-eyed Shirley Temple and Dick
and Jane that she will have the perfect life that they have. The importance of
this book goes beyond its value as a work of literature. Morrison speaks to the
masses, both white and black, showing how a racist social system wears down the
minds and souls of people, how dominate images of white heroes and heroines
with blue eyes and wonderful lives show young black children that to be white
means to be successful and happy, and then they look around at their own lives
of poverty and oppression and learn to hate their black heritage for keeping
them from the Dick and Jane world. Morrison does not solve these problems, nor
does she even try, but she does show a reflection of a world that cannot call
itself right or moral.
Works Cited
Team,
Schoolworkhelper Editorial.
<https://schoolworkhelper.net/toni-morissons-the-bluest-eye-summary-analysis/#ampshare=https://schoolworkhelper.net/toni-morissons-the-bluest-eye-summary-analysis/>.
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