Black empowerment and Afro-American values in Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye
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Date
2021-03-22
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(CRP), International Islamic University Chittagong, Bangladesh,
Abstract
Abstract
The Bluest Eye of Toni Morrison is extraordinarily significant, as it addresses the different sides
of American literature, and the lives of the Afro-American people. Although the conventional
theological aspects of white culture can negatively influence other characters of Morrison, it
is Pecola whose life appears to be increasingly defenseless against the impulses of the
individuals who have accepted the Western custom. In a democratic country, people generally
have the same value, but there are still prejudices in the concepts of beauty and worthiness.
The search for freedom, black identity, the nature of evil and the robust voices of
African-Americans have become themes for African-American literature. Folklore covers the
history of black and white interaction in the United States and also summarizes the feelings
expressed in protest literature1. Morrison argues that the survival of the dark ladies in a white
dominated society depends on loving their own way of life and dark race and rejecting the
models of white culture or white excellence. This article attempts to examine The Bluest Eye
from the perspective of empowerment of blacks and African American and their value
system.
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Keywords
Afro-American values,, Black Empowerment,, African culture,, Toni Morrison