Friday, October 25, 2019
Free Bluest Eye Essays - Learning to Hate :: Bluest Eye Essays
      The Bluest Eye  - Learning to Hate                  Many American's today are not satisfied with their physical appearance. They  do not feel that they are as beautiful as the women on television or in  magazines. The media is brainwashing American females that if they are not slim  and have blonde hair and blue eyes, they are not beautiful. This causes women  not only to hate the ideal females, but also hate themselves. In Toni Morrison's  novel The Bluest Eye two of her main characters, Claudia and Pecola show hatred  toward others, and themselves because they are not as beautiful as the supreme  females.            Claudia's hatred starts at the beginning of the novel when she and her sister  are staring at Rosemary Villanucci. Rosemary has what Claudia and Frieda want.  They want the things that white people have. "We stare at her, wanting her  bread, but more than that wanting to poke the arrogance out of her eyes and  smash the pride of ownership that curls her chewing mouth."(Morrison, p.9)  Claudia and Frieda hate Rosemary because she has all of the things that Claudia  and Frieda will never have or be, particularly Rosemary's white skin. This  forces a feeling of self-hatred for being black upon the girls.            You can see Claudia's hatred again when she receives a white baby doll for  Christmas. Instead of adoring and cradling the new gift, as most other children  would have done, she mutilated and destroyed the doll. "Adults, older girls,  shops, magazines, newspapers, window sign - all the world had agreed that a  blue-eyed, yellow-haired, pink-skinned doll was what every girl child treasured.  `Here,' they said, 'this is beautiful, and if you are on this day `worthy' you  may have it.'" (Morrison p. 20-21) She hated the doll's blonde hair and blue  eyes staring back at her, reminding her of how different she looked from the  doll. She knew that she was wrong for destroying the doll, but she could not  refrain herself from doing it. The doll, symbolized the perfect girl, and she  knew she was very far from looking like her. In Emily Prager's essay "Our  Barbies, Ourselves", she "reveals the damaging effect of a doll that establishes  such an impossible standard of physical perfection for    little girls.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.