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The Bluest Eye, By Toni Morrison

Decent Essays

living condition after the Great Depression, but these movies also ingrain into her mind the concept of beauty that is measured by race and skin color, bringing her torturous feelings of shame and envy when she returns to the realm of reality into her own skin and life. After their interactions with accessible dolls and movies, Pecola and her mother are left miserable as they become more aware of their dark skin color and how far away it is from white.
“Blackness” in The Bluest Eye and the Islamic religion in Disgraced are perceived as inferior and in opposition to American society and ideas, and characters associated with these backgrounds constantly experience discrimination from the rest of society. Throughout Morrison’s novel, Pecola has

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