The Bluest Eye
by
Toni Morrison
(Themes)
Whiteness, the Standard of Beauty
The
Bluest Eye provides an extended depiction of the ways in which internalized
white beauty standards deform the lives of black girls and women. Implicit
messages that whiteness is superior are everywhere, including the white baby
doll given to Claudia, the idealization of Shirley Temple, the consensus that
light-skinned Maureen is cuter than the other black girls, the idealization of
white beauty in the movies, and Pauline Breedlove’s preference for the little
white girl she works for over her daughter. Adult women, having learned to hate
the blackness of their own bodies, take this hatred out on their children—Mrs. Breedlove
shares the conviction that Pecola is ugly, and lighter-skinned Geraldine curses
Pecola’s blackness.
Claudia
remains free from this worship of whiteness, imagining Pecola’s unborn baby as
beautiful in its blackness. But it is hinted that once Claudia reaches
adolescence, she too will learn to hate herself, as if racial self-loathing
were a necessary part of maturation. The person who suffers most from white
beauty standards is, of course, Pecola. She connects beauty with being loved
and believes that if she possesses blue eyes, the cruelty in her life will be
replaced by affection and respect. This hopeless desire leads ultimately to
madness, suggesting that the fulfillment of the wish for white beauty may be
even more tragic than the wish impulse itself.
Pecola’s
desire for blue eyes is based on one correct insight into her world: she
believes that the cruelty she witnesses and experiences is connected to how she
is seen. If she had beautiful blue eyes, Pecola imagines, people would not want
to do ugly things in front of her or to her. The accuracy of this insight is
affirmed by her experience of being teased by the boys—when Maureen comes to
her rescue, it seems that they no longer want to behave badly under Maureen’s
attractive gaze.
In a
more basic sense, Pecola and her family are mistreated in part because they
happen to have black skin. By wishing for blue eyes rather than lighter skin,
Pecola indicates that she wishes to see things differently as much as she
wishes to be seen differently. She can only receive this wish, in effect, by
blinding herself. Pecola is then able to see herself as beautiful, but only at
the cost of her ability to see accurately both herself and the world around
her. The connection between how one is seen and what one sees has a uniquely
tragic outcome for her.
The Power of Stories
The
Bluest Eye is not one story, but multiple, sometimes contradictory,
interlocking stories. Characters tell stories to make sense of their lives, and
these stories have tremendous power for both good and evil. Claudia’s stories,
in particular, stand out for their affirmative power. First and foremost, she
tells Pecola’s story, and though she questions the accuracy and meaning of her
version, to some degree her attention and care redeem the ugliness of Pecola’s
life. Furthermore, when the adults describe Pecola’s pregnancy and hope that
the baby dies, Claudia and Frieda attempt to rewrite this story as a hopeful
one, casting themselves as saviors. Finally, Claudia resists the premise of
white superiority, writing her own story about the beauty of blackness. Stories
by other characters are often destructive to themselves and others. The story
Pauline Breedlove tells herself about her own ugliness reinforces her
self-hatred, and the story she tells herself about her own martyrdom reinforces
her cruelty toward her family. Soaphead Church’s personal narratives about his
good intentions and his special relationship with God are pure hypocrisy.
Stories
are as likely to distort the truth as they are to reveal it. While Morrison
apparently believes that stories can be redeeming, she is no blind optimist and
refuses to let us rest comfortably in any one version of what happens.
Sexual Invitation and Abuse
The
Bluest Eye is about both the pleasures and the perils of sexual initiation. Early
in the novel, Pecola has her first menstrual period, and toward the novel’s end
she has her first sexual experience, which is violent. Frieda knows about and
anticipates menstruating, and she is initiated into sexual experience when she
is fondled by Henry Washington. We are told the story of Cholly’s first sexual experience,
which ends when two white men force him to finish having sex while they watch.
The fact, that all of these experiences are humiliating and hurtful, indicates,
that sexual coming-of-age is fraught with peril, especially in an abusive
environment.
In
the novel, parents carry much of the blame for their children’s often traumatic
sexual coming-of age. The most blatant case is Cholly’s rape of his own
daughter, Pecola, which is, in a sense, a repetition of the sexual humiliation
Cholly experienced under the gaze of two racist whites. Frieda’s experience is
less painful than Pecola’s because her parents immediately come to her rescue.
Frieda is not given information that lets her understand what has happened to
her. Instead, she lives with a vague fear of being “ruined” like the local
prostitutes. The prevalence of sexual violence in the novel suggests that
racism is not the only thing that distorts black girlhoods. There is also a
pervasive assumption that women’s bodies are available for abuse. The refusal
on the part of parents to teach their girls about sexuality makes the girls’ transition
into sexual maturity difficult.
A number of characters in The Bluest Eye define their lives through a denial of their bodily needs. Geraldine prefers cleanliness and order to the messiness of sex, and she is emotionally frigid as a result. Similarly, Pauline prefers cleaning and organizing the home of her white employers to expressing physical affection toward her family. Soaphead Church finds physicality distasteful, and this peculiarity leads to his preference for objects over humans and to his perverse attraction to little girls. In contrast, when characters experience happiness, it is generally in viscerally physical terms. Claudia prefers to have her senses indulged by wonderful scents, sounds, and tastes than to be given a hard white doll. Cholly’s greatest moments of happiness are eating the best part of a watermelon and touching a girl for the first time. Pauline’s happiest memory is of sexual fulfillment with her husband. The novel suggests that, no matter how messy and sometimes violent human desire is, it is also the source of happiness: denial of the body begets hatred and violence, not redemption.
0 Comments