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- Quest for Personal Identity in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye
-
- Post World War I, many new opportunities were given to the growing and
- expanding group of African Americans living in the North. Almost 500,00
- African Americans moved to the northern states between 1910 and 1920. This
- was the beginning of a continuing migration northward. More than 1,500,000
- blacks went north in the 1930's and 2,500,00 in the 1940's. Life in the
- North was very hard for African Americans. Race riots, limited housing
- resulting in slum housing, and restricted job opportunities were only a few
- of the many hardships that the African American people had to face at this
- time. Families often had to separate, social agencies were overcrowded with
- people that all needed help, crime rates increased and many other resulting
- problems ensued. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison takes place during this
- time period. A main theme in this novel is the "quest for individual
- identity and the influences of the family and community in that quest"
- (Trescott). This theme is present throughout the novel and evident in many
- of the characters. Pecola Breedlove, Cholly Breedlove, and Pauline
- Breedlove and are all embodiments of this quest for identity, as well as
- symbols of the quest of many of the Black northern newcomers of that time.
- The Breedlove family is a group of people under the same roof, a family by
- name only. Cholly (the father) is a constantly drunk and abusive man. His
- abusive manner is apparent towards his wife Pauline physically and towards
- his daughter Pecola sexually. Pauline is a "mammy" to a white family and
- continues to favor them over her biological family. Pecola is a little black
- girl with low self esteem. The world has led her to believe that she is ugly
- and that the epitome of "beautiful" requires blue eyes. Therefore every
- night she prays that she will wake up with blue eyes.
- Brought up as a poor unwanted girl, Pecola Breedlove desires the acceptance
- and love of society. The image of "Shirley Temple beauty" surrounds her. In
- her mind, if she was to be beautiful, people would finally love and accept
- her. The idea that blue eyes are a necessity for beauty has been imprinted on
- Pecola her whole life. "If [I] looked different, beautiful, maybe Cholly
- would be different, and Mrs. Breedlove too. Maybe they would say, `Why look
- at pretty eyed Pecola. We mustn't do bad things in front of those pretty
- [blue] eyes'" (Morrison 46). Many people have helped imprint this ideal of
- beauty on her. Mr. Yacowbski as a symbol for the rest of society's norm,
- treats her as if she were invisible. "He does not see her, because for him
- there is nothing to see. How can a fifty-two-year-old white immigrant
- storekeeper... see a little black girl?" (Morrison 48). Her classmates also
- have an effect on her. They seem to think that because she is not beautiful,
- she is not worth anything except as the focal point of their mockery. "Black
- e mo. Black e mo. Yadaddsleepsnekked. Black e mo black e mo ya dadd sleeps
- nekked. Black e mo..." (Morrison 65). Shouted by her classmates on such a
- regular basis, this scorn seemed not to penetrate anymore. As if it were not
- bad enough being ridiculed by children her own age, adults also had to mock
- her. Geraldine, a colored woman, who refused to tolerate "niggers", happened
- to walk in while Pecola was in her house. "`Get out,' she said her voice
- quiet. `You nasty little black bitch. Get out of my house'" (Morrison 92). By
- having an adult point out to her that she really was a "nasty" little girl,
- it seems all the more true. Pecola was never able to get away from this kind
- of ridicule.
- At home she was put through the same thing, if not worse because her family
- members were the ones who were supposed to love her. Her mother was not able
- conceal her obvious affection towards a white girl over her. One day as
- Pecola was visiting her mother at the home where she is working, Pecola
- accidentally knocked over a blueberry pie. Obviously burned by the hot
- pastry, her mother completely ignored Pecola's feelings of pain and instead
- tended to the comforting of her white "daughter". "`Crazy foo...my floor,
- mess ...look what you...get on out...crazy...crazy...my floor , my floor....'
- Her words were hotter and darker than the smoking berries. The little [white]
- girl in pink started to cry. Mrs. Breedlove turned to her. `Hush, baby, hush.
- Don't cry no more'" (Morrison 109). Her mother viewed Pecola as an obstacle
- that had the potential to get in the way of her white charge's happiness and
- consequently her happiness. Her mother refused to show any love to Pecola
- because it might interfere with more important things. For a little girl, the
- love of her mother is the most important love she can receive. Without that,
- how can she think that she is worth anything at all?
- Finally the rape by her father is the last evidence Pecola needs to believe
- completely that she is an ugly unlovable girl. While in most cases a father
- figure is one who little girls look to for guidance and approval, Cholly is
- the exact opposite. He hurts Pecola in a physical way that in one attempt
- measures up to the years of hurtful mockery. He took away from her the one
- thing that was utterly and completely hers. After the rape, Pecola was never
- even remotely the same:
- She was so sad to see. Grown people looked away; children, those who were not
- frightened by her, laughed outright. The damage done was total. She spent
- her days, walking up and down her head jerking to the beat of a drummer so
- distant only she could hear. Elbows bent, hands on shoulders, she flailed
- her arms like a bird in an eternal, grotesquely futile effort to fly. Beating
- the air, a winged but grounded bird intent on the blue void it could not
- reach-could not even see- but which filled the valleys of the mind.
- In short, after the rape, Pecola went insane. Pecola's search for identity
- was defined by her everlasting desire to be loved. Her purpose in life was to
- be beautiful and as a result of that to be loved. Her family and community
- made it impossible for her to ever be sanely content.
- Cholly Breedlove the father and eventually rapist of Pecola, is a bastard.
- He was born to an unwed mother; his father ran away the day of his birth and
- his mother abandoned him three days later. This horrible beginning reflects
- his everyday views and actions. His mother attempted to leave him alone in
- the world. His father figure was an empty void in his life. After his legal
- guardian, his aunt, dies, Cholly decided that as an inner mission he needs to
- find his father to find himself. To understand exactly who he is he needs to
- look into his past. A long search ends in an extremely disappointing -
- crushing- experience. As Cholly tries to explain his identity to his father,
- he becomes flustered, "The man's eyes frightened him. `I just thought... I
- mean my name is Cholly.'" His father's face changes as he begins to
- understand. He shouts at Cholly, "Tell that bitch she got her money. Now, get
- the fuck outta my face!'" (Morrison 156). This extremely embarrassing
- encounter with his father scars him for life. His only image of a father
- figure is one who brings pain. Cholly's sexual history starts off painfully
- as well. His first attempt at sex was scorned, mocked and watched by two
- white police officers. "The men had shone a flashlight right on his behind .
- He had stopped, terrified. They chuckled. The beam of the flashlight did not
- move. `Go on,' they said. `Go on and finish. And, nigger, make it good.' The
- flashlight did not move" (Morrison 42). These first two episodes left a huge
- impact on him that eventually caused him to do something that would not have
- happened had he had proper guidance in those areas. Cholly's family (or lack
- thereof) and his community as a boy ultimately influenced the way he was as a
- man. Their effects on him molded his personality and as a result influenced
- his identity.
- Another cause of his eventual downfall was the way the community perceived
- him. They treated him disrespectfully, talked about him behind his back, and
- made a mockery of his name. After Cholly attempts to burn his own house down,
- he earns a reputation as being a scoundrel. Who, "having put his family
- outdoors, had catapulted himself beyond the reaches of human consideration.
- He had joined the animals; was indeed, an old dog, a snake, a ratty nigger"
- (Morrison 18). As long as society had an idea of who this man was and what
- he stood for, it was impossible for Cholly to rise above them. While it is
- hard to make a good first impression, it is near impossible to change that
- impression. With that in mind he could go nowhere but down.
- Cholly's ultimate downfall, occur simultaneously with the rape of Pecola:
- The tenderness welled up in him, as he sank to his knees, his eyes on the
- foot of his daughter. Crawling on all fours toward her, he raised his hand
- and caught the foot in an upward stroke...His mouth trembled at the firm
- sweetness of her flesh. He closed his eyes, letting his fingers dig into her
- waist. The rigidness of her shocked body, the silence of her stunned throat,
- was better than Pauline's easy laughter had been. The confused mixture of his
- memories of Pauline and the doing of a wild and forbidden thing excited him,
- and a bolt of desire ran down his genitals, giving it length, and softening
- the lips of his anus. He wanted to fuck-tenderly. But the tenderness would
- not hold. The tightness of her vagina was more than he could bear. His soul
- seemed to slip down to his guts and fly out to her, and the gigantic thrust
- he made into her then provoked the only sound she made-a hollow suck of air
- in the back of her throat. Like the rapid loss of air from a circus balloon.
- With this final act, Cholly lost all humanity conceivable. His search for
- himself ended in destruction.
- Pauline Breedlove, wife of Cholly, mother of Pecola, is a servant in a
- white household. The times she was there working for this family without any
- reminder of her own failures were the only times that she felt truly happy .
- It was there and only there that she finally felt as if she were part of
- something successful. In Pauline's search for her identity and ultimately
- her happiness, she learned exactly what she would have to sacrifice so that
- she could be content, as well as the difference between herself and the rest
- of society. The movie theater helped her realize the stark difference between
- her and other women. "Along with the idea of romantic love, she was
- introduced to another-physical beauty. She was never able, after her
- education in the movies, to look at a face and not assign it some category in
- the scale of absolute beauty..." (Morrison 122). As Pauline learned what
- physical beauty was, she also learned for what it stood. In that time
- physical beauty was the ideal of Shirly Temple beauty, the equation of blond
- hair and blue eyes to beauty. It signified equality, happiness, worthiness,
- and overall comfort. If you were a white woman with those qualities living in
- northern America you were content, it was that simple. As Pauline learned
- these guidelines, she gave birth to Pecola and got a job as a black "mammy"
- to a white family. She quickly learned that when she was in the company of
- her white family, who were equal, happy, and worthy in the eyes of society,
- it rubbed off on her and she felt as if she was part of all these positive
- virtues. On the other hand, the more time she spent with her own black
- family, the more time she realized how ugly, poor, and unworthy they were.
- It was as if "the master had said, `you are ugly people.' They had looked
- about themselves and saw nothing to contradict the statement; saw, in fact,
- support for it leaning at them from every billboard, every movie, every
- glance" (Morrison 39). In coming upon this realization, Pauline has a
- decision to make. She could have stuck with her biological family, continued
- to be unsatisfied but be accepted as an equal, or she could completely give
- up on her own family and devote all her time, energy, and love on her white
- charges. To Pauline this decision is obvious and she makes it hastily.
- Without a second thought she mentally leaves her family in place for her
- "Perfect Life". However she fails to realize that by committing herself to a
- servant's life that's all she will ever amount to be - a black servant in a
- white world.
- Have all of the characters found their identity? Pecola Breedlove yearned
- for blue eyes. At the end of the book she believes that she has those blue
- eyes. She believes that people treat her funny because they are jealous of
- her blue eyes and she has learned to happily accept that. Pecola yearned for
- the acceptance and love of society seen through her eyes. No matter if that
- acceptance and love were really there, she thought it was and therefore was
- able to survive. "I [Soaphead Church], I have caused a miracle. I gave her
- the eyes. I gave her the blue, blue, two blue eyes... No one else will see
- her blue eyes. But she will. And she will live happily ever after" (Morrison
- 182). Pecola found herself only by going insane. Although Pecola is not
- accepted by society for reasons she does not understand, she puts her
- exclusion from society into terms she can comprehend. Society influences her
- identity. They mold her into what she becomes by not giving her the guidance
- and approval she needs. In the same way, Cholly found himself separated from
- the community. After the realization of the perception the community has of
- him, he is demoralized and does an act of inhumanity. He could not live with
- the realization of the monster he had become and he disappeared. As a man he
- did not know who he was. In a sense he needed an act that would completely
- set him apart from the rest of the rational world for him to find himself. He
- sanely found himself as Pecola insanely found herself. They finished with
- varying results. While Pecola was separate but content, Cholly was separate
- and unsatisfied. Pauline, on the other hand, chose an identity she could be
- content with. She had an option to become two very different people and she
- chose the one that seemed right for her. Her distorted view of reality made
- it seem that the choice she made was accepted in society, and would allow her
- to increase her status in society. However, her overseer saw it and
- described it in actuality. "We could never find anyone like Polly. She will
- not leave the kitchen until everything is in order. Really, she is the ideal
- servant" (Morrison 128). This twist of perspective shows how Pauline is
- really accredited. Are they satisfied with what they have found? It seems
- that the only truly satisfied person is Pauline. Pecola is not content, she
- will not ever be. Her father took away that option. Cholly is not satisfied.
- He can not handle the naked truth that he is a beast, and therefore retreats
- from society. Pauline, though looked down upon by society was somehow
- satisfied with her identity. Her twisted view of reality made her believe
- that she was accepted as an equal in society. The Breedlove family are
- representatives of the black rising community in the north. Pecola a
- "dismissed, trivialized, misread" ( Morrison 216) child, was representative
- of the younger Black population. While her ending does not conform to
- societies norm her story does. Cholly was a misunderstood Blackmale adult. He
- was a part of the generation that started the Black community in the north.
- For Cholly, the responsibilities of that were too great and he therefore
- needed to withdraw from society. Pauline was representative of the part of
- the Black --- that tried too hard to conform to the White culture. She found
- what she was looking for and was able to convince herself that she was happy,
- but she did not really have a place where she truly fit in. The Breedlove
- family is a black family living in the 1940s. They have to deal with the
- same problems, situations, and dilemmas as do the rest of the rising Black
- community in the north. The Bluest Eye tells their story and offers their
- experiences.
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