bluest eye
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.In The Eye Of The Beholder: The Search for Self in The Bluest Eye Ugliness and shame permeate Pecola Breedloves being in every step she takes, every word she breathes, and every thought that her mind conceives. Pecola spends her life seeking acceptance in the eyes of those around her. She believes that if she can just possess the blue eyes that all those white, blond, blue-eyed, Shirley-Temple-looking-girls have, then she will also attain the love and happiness that seems to emanate from every aspect of their being. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison depicts Pecolas life as dark, dreary and as a desperate search for that small detail of beauty that will change the way others see her and grant her that integral spark of existence that incessantly eludes her. Through Pecolas interaction with the other characters in the novel, Morrison shows us the destructive force of valuing our self-worth by societal standards of beauty. Morrison discloses victimization in many forms throughout The Bluest Eye. The prejudice that jumps out and victimizes Pecola seems to strengthen the idea that blue eyes will achieve for her the acceptance she seeks. As early as first grade we are conditioned to the ideal of American beauty. Samuels an
Self-hatred is something that can thoroughly destroy an individual. As it was fictitiously evidenced in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye, it can lead an individual to insanity..