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Analysis of the The Bluest Eyes

 

            Morrison is a Nobel peace prize award winning African American writer who wrote The Bluest Eye. The Bluest eye is the sadden tale of a young black girl in a black community. When reading the novel, you meet and interact with many of the characters. Pecola Breedlove, the main character who suffers significantly in the society she's placed in. Her brother, who consistently tries to escape the mad house. Pauline and Cholly Breedlove, her unhappily married parents who pass their misfortunes on to their children. Frieda and Claudine McTeer, young girls reminiscing about their youth and the horrible summer when they came to know Pecola. The McTeer parents, who show us how, black parents govern. Reverend Soaphead, a man just looking for acceptance. And many other characters who made this novel what it was. Instead of conventional chapters, The Bluest Eye is broken up into the four seasons. These types of divisions in the novel mark a correlation between the seasons and the chain of events in the story. For example, the section marked autumn, which is characteristic of harvesting and reaping the results of spring planting, is the section of the novel where we are introduced to the Breedlove Family reaping a harvest from the seeds of racism, poverty, anger, etc described in the spring section (James 10). Morrison tells this novel in circular narration. Circular narration is telling a story again and again, each time adding new information; circling the subject and revealing more detail with each telling. In the story there are three levels of narrative consciousness. The 1st is personal idealized consciousness of childhood as demonstrated by Pecola yearning for the blue eyes. The 2nd is the novels central narrator Claudia McTeer. The 3rd is the social/ historical consciousness of an objective narrator who shows the reader the anger of Black lives (Bjork 39). There are many different themes that Morrison examines and explores in this novel.


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