Abstract

Toni Morrison is the most well-known sophisticated novelist in the history of African American literature. She has been recognised as a strident voice for exploited black people as well as master craftsman of the dominant artistic form. The Bluest Eye is a tragic tale about a young, black girl Pecola and her desire for the bluest eyes, the symbol for her of what it means to be beautiful and therefore worthy in society. It clarifies the damaging impacts of white standards and the importance on the lives of black people. It represents very sad feeling in terms of tragic conditions of blacks in racist America. She investigates the devastating effects of the beauty standards of the dominant culture of the self-image of the African female adolescent. Exploring the complexity of black female experience in white America, Toni Morrison attempts to resolve the contradiction inherent in her African American identity as a black women writer. In the novel The Bluest Eye it shows the terrible consequences for black internalising the values of a white culture that both directly & indirectly rejects them. A close study of the interrelationship of race, gender, and class in the novels of Toni Morrison reveals the emergence of a revolutionary pattern. This paper attempts to find out the trial of the blacks women in search of self-identity in the novel of Toni Morrison.

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