The role and influence of the blue eyes male character seems to have a role, and each male plays a role in this novel. Regardless of whether you are kind, compassionate, hardworking or hardworking father like McTerm, people with good and evil like Cholly Breedlove, Soaphead Church, Mr. Henry, and other local school boys It is not. In the novel, most male characters seem to play the role of darkness, evil, meanness. Is there a reason? Tony Morrison is a sexist and likes women.
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.
The role and influence of the blue eyes male character seems to have a role, and each male plays a role in this novel. Regardless of whether you are kind, compassionate, hardworking or hardworking father like McTerm, people with good and evil like Cholly Breedlove, Soaphead Church, Mr. Henry, and other local school boys It is not. In the novel, most male characters seem to play the role of darkness, evil, meanness. Is there a reason? Tony Morrison is a sexist and likes women.
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