I think that the blue eyes are a very good literary work, but it should not be regarded as 'America's wonderful novel'. I think the novel is amazing to the terrorist attacks of being an African-American child in the 1940s, but these horrible situations are not enough to make it a "wonderful American novel." This novel should be the reality of the reader and it will be achieved successfully unless there is a coincidence that seems to promote the plot (if any) contained in the novel.
In the novel "The Bluest Eyes", Tony Morrison combines techniques such as how to use the metaphor, satirical usage of the name, and the visual image she uses. The theme of "blue eyes" is developing mainly on consistency of African Americans against white standards. Women can make their skin white and adjust their hair by changing their hair, but you can not change the color of their eyes. The desire to change his / her identity is itself a desire to become a depressed eye, a desire to become an indication of instability of Pecora itself.
In The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison draws the African-American community of Lorain, Ohio, focusing on the role of women. According to Pal, Morrison's novel explores the meaning of darkness and is raising the following questions in the "blue eyes": What does it mean to be a black woman in a white male hegemonic society Is it? Invisible society means getting popular in the dark (Pal 2439). In this chapter, I will explore how African-American characters deal with their invisibility. Although the protagonist and his family succumbed to the pressure of white culture, their self-awareness was distorted, but McPherson's sisters did not succumb to the mainstream of culture, and they acknowledged the difference between them and the Caucasian Man
In 'The Bluest Eyes', the author Toni Morrison depicts the American concept and his standards for African Americans living in an American white society through a narrator called Claudia. Because she is an innocent girl born in her family and does not provide support to endure the racial prejudice of society, the protagonist of Morrison's novel, Pecola Breed Love, is one of the most victims It is real. A small black girl Pecola is eager for a blue eyes, it shows that the white dominated culture absorbed almost African-American women and lost them.