Tony Morrison was the first black woman who was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature, born at Chloe Anthony Wolfford on February 18, 1931 in Lauren, Ohio. She is the second of the four children George and Ramah Wofford. Her parents escaped racial discrimination and moved from south to Ohio to find better opportunities in the north. Lorrain is a small industrial city where European immigrants living next door, Mexican, and southern blacks live. Chloe went to a comprehensive school. In a freshman, she is the only black student in the class and the only student to read.
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.
Morrison's Family Relations Tony Morrison's blue eyed eye "The Bluest Eyes" is a story about the life of a young black girl, Pecola Bladorov, who grew up after the First World War. . She prayed with the blue eyes and "Please make her beautiful", which in turn was accepted by her family and associates. The main problem of this book is the ugly concept that "darkness" has neither value nor beauty. This view will be handed down at birth and become a cultural barrier. Promoting a good family relationship to promote a healthy and meaningful family relationship is important for adolescent life. Families are not only important for connection between people and the past, they are also powerful and powerful agents that provide teenagers the most love and care they need. Young people can establish good family relationships in various ways. First of all, teenagers should respect each family member and care for each family member. This includes older elderly people
In Toni Morrison's "The Blue Eye", beauty is defined simply as golden hair, fair skin, blue eyes, and the beauty of white culture. The blue eyes show Pecora, its only wish is to have blue eyes. Pecola is a girl who was exiled from her house and detained in the county, as her father, Cholly Breedlove, burned down the house. She finally moved to McTee house next to a black family. Pekora represents the black culture. Her wish is so innocent that her character is itself a tragedy. But that leads to her death. Pecora is a symbol of self-hatred and self decline, a common feature of "the blue eyes". Her belief is not her own. Instead, she accepted the belief that society imposed on her young innocent thought. Beauty is everything she does not do, and every thing she will never do. At the beginning of the book, Pekora is suffering from the concept of beauty. "Dandelion. I think it is very beautiful.