Tony Morrison's "Blue Eye" published in 1970, the struggle began in childhood. Two young black women - Claudia and Pecora - have a combined power of externally imposed sex and racial definition that black women need to handle not only black men but also white men and white women Revealed. Black women fight, double sex and ethnicity. All male definitions applicable to white male women are intensively applied to black men, white men, and white female black women.
In The Bluest Eye (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970), Toni Morrison talks about a girl who wants the blue eyes. Teacher, editor, and writer Tony Morrison wrote four books. Bluest Eye talks about Pecola Breedlove 's life through family - wide violence throughout the year, family relationship, incest and loneliness. The novel starts talking about how the book ends when Pecora was raped by his father. In the first chapter, I tell you that Pecola's father burned the house. "Bleed love of a dog burned down the house" (17). Pecola moved to MacTeers, and she came to menstruation for the first time. Pecola and MacTeers are talking about the characteristics of Mary Jane and Shirley Temple. Then Pekora and her parents returned to the store. Breedlove lives in the shops and I think they are difficult to read. Back to the house Pecola had to fight against her mother Pauline and her father Cholly
In "The Bluest Eyes", the author Toni Morrison made a story about the concept of racial self-hatred and how it exists in the minds of an infant. "The Blue Eye" is directly related to the personal psychology of the hero Pecola Breedlove. Pekora's self-disgusting feeling and inferiority complex are so strong that she will take every action to calm them. In her young heart, she needs a miracle; she needs the most blue eyes. All the tragedies of this novel can be traced back to the big problem of white as the standard of beauty. The belief that white people set beautiful standards is the main factor of racial self-hatred, which is happening in the United States both in the past and the present. Destruction of many characters in this book through racial discrimination of white beauty and the desire of a black society to gain this beauty