Sunday, November 27, 2016

Shy Dog

Before Jay Gatsby was even introduced, the environment that he created for himself was exposed. The parties, the girls, everything you would associate with a confident young man ready to live in the now. Although Nick later confesses that he could not "see nothing sinister about him" (54). Nick continued to wonder if by Gatsby "not drinking helped to set him off from his guests" (54).
While I was reading this part of the book I wondered to myself why Gatsby would waste his money on these parties every weekend if he wasn't even going to take part in them himself, or simply converse with people. As I continued reading the book I started to realize that this environment surrounding him was not representative of his personality at all, it was more of a romantic gesture. Jay is shy, so shy that he wasted his time on all these parties in hope of one single person coming, one single woman. Daisy. To his disappointment however it didn't work, he had to go one step further. He had to have Jordan Baker talk to Nick to set up a meet up between Daisy and himself. Although even in these desperate measures he was taking to see his lover he could not directly take action himself proving his truly shy nature. I think that Fitzgerald tried to somehow mask Gatsby's character at the beginning of the book to amplify the love Gatsby had for Daisy and to make his actions more romantic.

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Dog Bone

A lot of The Bluest Eye focuses on just that, THE bluest eye. Although another metaphor that astounded me was the case in which Toni Morrison uses a different metaphor of a decaying tooth to emphasize the constant pressure the black race faces to motivate themselves to conform to white culture. The author references "the poison" (Morrison, 60) that is the cause of the damaged tooth to represent the white race, the reason for the damaged inferior blacks. On top of using poorly connotared words Morrison uses colors to make it obvious what she is referencing. For example the superficial "enamal" (Morrison, 60) is making it apparent that this shiny white exterior is the characteristic that all African Americans are yearning for will always be exposed by the "brown putty underneath" (Morrison, 60). In that time, it did not matter how hard the black race tried to mask themselves as white the standard the white race kept feeding them were impossible to reach without the African American being damaged first. I think Morrison used the metaphor of a tooth on an African American because it is one of the only places in which a white color is exposed. This furthermore expands Morrison's purpose in proving that no matter how hard one may try, the true culture with in will never be escaped by soely consuming the culture of another. The feeling of being supierior leads the white race to continue discriminating against people different than them because they are the ones controlling the social norms that are being consumed by the rest.

Sunday, November 13, 2016

The Dog with Two Different Colored Eyes

In the novel The Bluest Eye a lot of it has to do with the black children and even adults trying to conform to the ways of the racist whites. A lot of this desire is represented in Pecola's constant obsession with all things with blue eyes. When she is exposed to the cat its "blue eyes in the black face held her" (Morrison, 90). In that moment Pecola was reminded of herself, her dream self. Once the cat died and it was framed as her fault, it led her once again to believe it was because of her physical appearance. If only she had those blue eyes people "mustn't do bad things in front of those pretty eyes" (Morrison, 46), she wouldn't have been framed for its death. Pecola thinks that if she looked more like the people who are harming her emotionally, she would be superior to where she is now. What Pecola is asking for is the ability to be able to cause others to have the close to the same about of emotional and physical insecurity as she has. Her wish to have the blonde hair and blue eyes of white people really illustrates her wish of obtaining the same power they have, over words, and over people. As of now Pecola has no strength, not against other people, and not against herself. If Pecola can't even fight against the words of her own brain, how can she fight against the words others superior to her?

Sunday, November 6, 2016

The Blue Eyed Husky

This week we started reading The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison and I was and still am shocked at the accuracy of her writing. Even though the book was written in a different time period where there was more racism against blacks and whites, a lot of the ideas still apply today. Society constructs a deffiniton for beauty where you have to have a certain skin tone, hair color, eye color, sense of style, etc.
To be beautiful in The Bluest Eye you had to have "sole green eyes, something summery in [your] complexion, and a rich autumn ripeness in [your] walk" (62). Today, some of the same rules apply. I remember when I was younger I was talking to my friend about our eyes. He began to tell me about a new surgery in which a layer of your eye could be take off so that the result would be blue eyes. Not going to lie, I was fascinated. When I was little I always saw these beautiful celebrities with bright blue eyes and new hip clothes and I always wanted to be like them. I think that for little kids especially it is easier to succumb to views of society due to the constant exposure to "beauty." Although for those kids who do not have the recourses to mimic their role models they are left thinking that they are nowhere near beautiful, which I think is the biggest problem in society.