In The Bluest Eye, Morrison characterizes men and women differently. On a
physical level, the men and women in the novel share the same “ugly” black
skin. However, the “ugliness” within the Black community in The Bluest Eye isn’t
a result of their skin color but rather the emotional corruption that causes
instability within the community. Morrison contrasts the men and women in the
novel but shows that perception within both genders is the ultimate cause of
“ugliness”.
Every single male in the bluest eye
is portrayed as an alcoholic/rapist/racist/in jail. This moral corruption that
exists within the African-American male community is because they fail to
perceive the negative effects of their actions. Cholly Breedlove doesn’t perceive that
“fighting”(Morrison 119) Pauline not only affects his wife but also prevents
his children from understanding the true definition of love and a home
Every single female is portrayed as a lonesome mother who has a skewed
perception of the world that causes her to believe that being beautiful is
greater than being moral, that dreams are greater than reality, and that having
a morally corrupt husband is better than having no husband at all. Pauline only
wants “clothes and makeup”(Morrison 119) so that other women “cast favorable
glances her way”(Morrison 119). She doesn’t understand that favorability is
based on morality not “looks”. But because this is the 1930’s, racism skews
Pauline’s perception making her believe that because she is “black/ugly” she
has to improve her beauty rather than her character. Morrison shows that having
eyes that perceive the world properly is more important than having the “bluest
eyes”.
I really liked how you analyzed the different ways in which beauty was affected by the different genders. Also, wasn't Claudia's dad portrayed as somewhat normal and not a alcoholic/rapist/racist?
ReplyDeleteYeah I felt that Claudia's dad was like a foil to Cholly Breedlove and other males because he's a model of morality who works hard and protects his daughters where as the other men are portrayed to be a model of sin who neglect their families.
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