The Relationships between Race, Beauty, and Identity in the American South through the Black Women in the Bluest Eye, a Novel by Toni Morrison
In The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison explores the relationships between race, beauty, and identity in the American South through the lens of several black women and girls. Just prior to this excerpt, Pecola had knocked a berry cobbler onto the floor, incurring the wrath of her mother, Polly. In this passage, Morrison uses personification and lists to argue that the proliferation and perpetuation of black stereotypes in twentieth century American society enables the continuation of the antebellum South’s assumption of […]