The Importance Of Beauty In The Bluest Eyes By Tori Morrison

1061 Words3 Pages

In today’s society, beauty is defined in many ways. You do not have to be thin, light-skinned, have a certain eye-color or physical appearances. Respecting and accepting yourself is the most beautiful thing anyone can do to themselves. Many, many years ago, it took a lot to prove to others that you were beautiful. In the story The Bluest Eyes by Tori Morrison, the story focuses on many aspects of life styles after the Great Depression. We are given a story in which love and beauty standards are not fully recognized through the same standards. How would a person feel loved, when society says that the skin that they are born in determines they are ugly, or not even near the beauty standards? The theme that was mentioned throughout this story was defined by, beauty standards. This theme is strong throughout the story with different scenarios and messages. The story started out with Claudia’s family living in Lorain, Ohio. The story is narrated by Claudia whom is an African American daughter. Claudia has an older sister by the name of Frieda. Claudia and Frieda are daughters to the MacTeer’s. The story
Pecola is a family friend of Claudia and Frieda. Pecola came to live with the MacTeer because of her abusive father and mother’s dysfunctional love. Pecola is the little girl who wished to be white, who wished to have blue eyes, who wished to be beautiful. Pecola knows that she is not beautiful and everyone tells her. “If she looked different, beautiful, maybe they’d say, “why, look at pretty-eyed Pecola. We mustn’t do bad things in front of those pretty eyes.” (Morrison, 46) Pecola’s self-esteem was demolished even when just being a new born. Her mother Pauline, knew that Pecola was ugly and did not hide it at all. Growing up, Pecola always wanted blue eyes, and always wished to someday have blue eyes, because that was beautiful. And if you had blue eyes, you were

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