Thursday, May 30, 2019
Impact of Whiteness on Blacks in Toni Morrisons The Bluest Eye Essay
The Impact of Whiteness on Blacks in Toni Morrisons The Bluest Eye  Toni Morrisons The Bluest Eye  does not focus on direct white oppression of a  dark-skinned community, but rather how  whiteness is ingrained in the minds of the  inexorable community and serves as a  destructive force. There are few white characters introduced in the  declare, but  whiteness and the culturally accepted ideal of whiteness as an indication or  measure of  truelove is ever present. Morrisons first page, The Dick and Jane  story, is a clean, simple and perfect example of whiteness. Mother, Father, Dick  and Jane are the family and they live in a pretty house with a cat and dog. This  is whiteness. Whiteness is nice, clean, happy and simple.  turn the page we  soon discover that perfect simplistic whiteness can turn chaotic and  destructive. This first shocking introduction to whiteness not  alone foreshadows  the end of the book, but is  alike the first of many direct examples of whiteness  and its pote   ntial to consume the mind and destroy the spirit.  Within the first few pages of the book we find  Shirley Temple and a white baby doll, both pretty with their blue eyes and  creamy skin. That both of these symbols of whiteness are young and introduced to   slender black children is very significant. Whiteness is known and begins to warp  around and take hold of them from the beginning. They are never allowed to  entertain or contemplate their own beauty because they are shown early on  symbols of pretty and they will never measure up. White baby dolls are loved and  Shirley Temple is adored while their black skin, wool like hair and brown eyes  are merely tolerated. We learn from Claudias example that the only way to keep  the whiteness from destroying y...  ...whiteness is potentially damaging. It is  also effective because is demonstrates how black communities self imploded if  they internalized the white ideal. This is very powerful. That notion that  whites did not need to by p   hysically present but merely symbolically  be  in order to undermine the stability and self-image of a black community.  Whiteness then did, and does, have the power to destroy if it is internalized  and accepted as the ideal--an ideal that is  unavailable and therefor all the  more damaging. Works Cited and Consulted Davis, Cynthia. Self, Society, and Myth in Toni Morrisons Fiction. Draper  222. Draper, James P., ed. Contemporary Literary Criticism. Toni Morrison.  Michigan Gale Research Inc., 1994. Morrison, Toni. The Bluest Eye. New York, New York Plume, 1994. Steiner, Wendy. The Clearest Eye. Draper 239.                   
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.