In Toni Morrison's "Blue Eye", Claudia struggled with the standard of beauty and hurt self-esteem. Claudia tried to understand why beauty standards do not include black girls. As the standard of beauty determines that white girls with blue eyes with blonde hair are beautiful images, not only are they noteworthy, they are also considered valuable for American culture in the 1940s Yes. Therefore, while Claudia learns the value and beauty of the absence of a black girl, she tries to understand why a white girl is beautiful and later became a valuable social superior social worker.
The blue eyes: the most basic theme of the novel integration, the blue eyes around the consistency of African Americans against white standards. Morrison carefully investigated the influence of white culture on classes, although beauty is a bigger subject in novels. Morrison built the foundation of America's problem and tried to recognize that African Americans do not need to comply with white standards at any level. Morrison's hero, Pecola Breed Love, undoubtedly accepted the ideology of the relationship between white features and beauty.
In 1970, Tony Morrison internalized the standard of beauty, aspiring to hold blue eyes, reflecting racial prejudice, a black girl who wrote the most blue eyes of Pecora. This poison will last in our culture. In the American bout of CNN, they showed a little girl ashamed of her "ugly" black skin. True ugliness is race discrimination, which is related to the way our society usually defines beauty. There is no reasonable purpose to maintain prejudice against facial features, skin color, skin color, or other characteristics of this type. You can try to hide the ugliness of prejudice behind the word of preference, but that does not change the fundamental reality of this situation. Is it acceptable for me to refuse to make friends with someone because of skin color? Is this just a matter of taste? So why do many people feel that it is acceptable to exclude races from more important, intimate and more promising happy incentive relationships?
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