Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Bluest Eye abd the development of the American Novel :: Bluest Eye Essays
      The Bluest Eye abd the development of the American Novel           In The Bluest Eye, Morrison describes the absurd and racist standard by which  the characters are judged. And through the actions taken by each character, that  absurd standard becomes more defined, the conflict more poignant. In this  particular work, it is the American ideal of beauty that makes Pecola resign her  self-image as ugly and it is Pecola's reaction to this standard, her futile wish  to become beautiful, that drives her into madness and thus completely exposes  the absurd and wrongful nature of this standard. And yet who created this  standard? It is present in movies, on candy wrappers. It is completely visible,  yet the creator of this standard is somewhere else, never appears as a  character.            It is this fate in which a character pits him/herself against that we have  seen in our study of the American novel. Faulkner has used perhaps the most  obvious "absent" character to drive the standard, the dead mother. The family  must react to the conflict, yet the conflict is set by someone who dies early in  the novel. Social standards are apparent in James's world, and perhaps the  father is the cause of these social standards. Yet they often seem outrageous to  us as readers, as there seems not to be a moral cause driving the doctor's  decisions, only stubbornness. In Munro's stories, we see the poor react to the  standard of the rich. Munro provides an example of the rich, but the character's  come across as flat, underdeveloped. This is not a criticism of Munro's  technique; it furthers the development of each character who holds themselves  against this standard. Vonnegut provides an outrageous world in which the  standards that life imposes seem absurd. And who has created    this absurd world  in which the characters seem forever at odds with? The creator we are provided  is admittedly a lie. Yet the absurdities force the reactions from the  characters.  					    
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