Tuesday, 19 February 2019

FINAL RESEARCH PAPER


the bluest eye cross cutting themes

WOMEN AND FEMININITY theme

The Bluest Eye is mostly concerned with the experience of African-American women in the 1940s. It presents a realistic view of the options for these women: they could get married and have children, work for white families, or become prostitutes. The novel also thematizes the culture of women and young girls, emphasizing beauty magazines, playing with dolls, and identifying with celebrities.

THE BLUEST EYE THEME OF SOCIETY AND CLASS

Race and class are nearly inextricable in The Bluest Eye, since there were so many economic barriers for African Americans during this time period. The African-American citizens of Lorain that we encounter are mostly working-class folks who work in coal mines or as domestic servants for white families. The breakdown of community is another aspect of this theme, since many of the characters who identify with middle-class white culture feel the need to separate themselves from lower-class blacks, or "black e mos," whom they associate with criminality and laziness.

THE BLUEST EYE THEME OF SEX

Sex in The Bluest Eye is awkward, humiliating, shameful, violent, and illegal – sometimes all at once. With the exception of Mr. MacTeer (whom we basically never see), all of the major male characters – Cholly Breedlove, Mr. Henry, and Soaphead Church – sexually desire young girls. As far as we know, Soaphead never, or rarely, acts on these desires (the novel keeps this ambiguous), but Mr. Henry gropes Frieda, and Cholly rapes his daughter Pecola at least twice, maybe more.

The larger point of all this is that black girls in the novel are victims, sexually and socially powerless. Adolescence for these girls does not involve having harmless crushes or discovering sexuality on their own – things we might expect of teenage girls. Rather, the young black girls in this novel are used to make the men feel more powerful. When we think about the importance of sex in the novel, we might consider how sex interacts with the intense power dynamics that Morrison establishes between white men, African-American men, and African-American women.


BELOVED THEMES


BELOVED THEME OF MEN AND MASCULINITY


Being a man is anything but simple in Beloved. Our leading men have some complicated relationships with women and with themselves. In order to prove their masculinity, men want to own things. So not owning anything—including themselves—leaves the male slave vulnerable to some pretty serious psych issues. Oh, and to baby girls who've come back from the dead.

BELOVED THEME OF LOVE

If you're looking for a sweet romance in Beloved, good luck. Sure, there's a major relationship in the book that seems to end happily, but for the most part, love is just really messy. And by messy, we mean colossally chaotic. For starters, love can literally kill in this book. Oh, and it can make good men go insane and brings babies back from the dead. If you want a sweet, cuddly type of love, we suggest you get a teddy bear. If you want to read about the kind of love that will make you shake, shiver, and cry, then Beloved is for you.

BELOVED THEME OF SLAVERY

Toni Morrison doesn't hold back when talking about slavery. In Beloved, we get all sides. For starters, there's the outright brutality and abuse of the system. That's the part we can all agree on. Then there are the grey areas. Examples? Beloved is full of 'em: a white slaveowner who treats his slaves as "real men"; a fugitive slave who kills her daughter so her daughter won't be caught by slavecatchers; a handful of white people who go above and beyond to help of fugitive slaves. Is there room for moral fuzziness on the topic of slavery? In Beloved there sure is.

BELOVED THEME OF THE SUPERNATURAL

Beloved can be spooky, sure. But the spookiness carries more than just shock value. The supernatural elements of the novel—ghosts! risen babies! spells!—usually have to do with the past making itself known in the present. Especially when the present is looking like it's about to head off happily into the future.

Tuesday, 12 February 2019

This video (comedy-irony) is a lesson for those people who blame the victim in every case of crime (especially in rapes). For more watch the video... Hope you'll enjoy and learn something from it!!

https://www.facebook.com/dedikuarfemres/videos/355449455297617/

Friday, 8 February 2019

Two part reading response : Beloved by Toni Morrison

Plot:  Beloved is a novel inspired by the story of an Afro-American slave ,who escaped slavery.
Sethe the protagonist of this novel escape from slavery with her daughter too. She lives in the house which is believed that the house is haunted because she killed her infant children. Meanwhile it appears Paul D which was one of the slaves from Sweet home ,arrives at Sethe's home and tries to bring a sense of peace and reality into home ,in trying to make the family forget the past,he forces out the spirit.Paul leaves because the spirit is to much for him .Sethe tried to escape with her children and thought to kill them because is the best way to get them from danger.While Sethe is confused and has a reminder of her God coming again ,Beloved disappears. The novel resolves with the returnig of Paul D to Sethe pledging his love .

MY Opinion 
In my opinion the act that Sethe made of killing her children is to protect them from suffering the same abuses she had as a slave
I think that this novel shows us the slavery fragments the minds and personalities of those who lived through it .Both Sethe and Paul D ,are trying to repress the memories of what happened to them and separate those past slaves from the free,fully realized slaves that they are trying to be now,for their own survival ,but the past is haunting them both psychologically and literally.But they can never be fully realized until they can get it out and exorcise it,so i think that the exorcism of beloved' is a parable for this psychological process of cleansing and healing.

Tuesday, 5 February 2019

Two part reading response ''The Bluest eye'' by Toni Morrison

The bluest eye displays extremely well the toils and pitfalls of being black in 1940's America. Although slavery was abolished at this point, stigma was still in place for being black. The struggle that Pecola faces in the novel is one that can be represented to each and everyone of us in our everyday lives. Beauty is what people are rated on, in today's society, and it is a shame. Being ugly puts you at a disadvantage, portrayed in the novel and life itself.

This novel gave us the opportunity to rethink about our behavior and thoughts too.

Sunday, 3 February 2019

Two part reading response ''The bluest eye''

The novel '' the bluest eye" written by Toni Morrison talks about the life of a young African-American girl named Pecola, which grows with great depression. She is considered 'ugly' because of the color of her skin and believes that the white color of the skin is more beautiful. Pecola prays for her eyes to turn blue so she can be as beautiful and loved as all white-haired kids with blue eyes in the US.
I really believe in the illustration of the fact that we should not be perfect in any way, we must make efforts and continue to learn about the world and take care of ourselves and the people around us.
We need to understand that it's not beauty everything a person does, it's the inner side that really matters.
.

Meghan Markle speaks about gender equality, this massage must be heard!!!

https://youtu.be/TMoVen6_XuA

FINAL RESEARCH PAPER

the bluest eye cross cutting themes WOMEN AND FEMININITY theme The Bluest Eye  is mostly concerned with the experience of African-...