"Splits." This essay discusses the Breedlove family from the novel The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison.
View Paper
ESSAY DETAILS
Words: 1097
Pages: 4
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 4
(approximately 235 words/page)
Essay Database > Literature
 The Breedlove family knows pain. They know their ugliness, too, and therefore they know loneliness, hardship, and misery. Their poverty envelops them in shame, forcing them to accept their defect. The Breedloves find the confinement of their poverty distressing, frustrating, and oftentimes infuriating. Thus, each Breedlove senses that he or she may never experience happiness.
In her novel The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison depicts the piteous state of the Breedlove's rented storefront apartment; specifically, she
showed first 75 words of 1097 total
Sign up for EssayTask and enjoy a huge collection of student essays, term papers and research papers. Improve your grade with our unique database!
showed first 75 words of 1097 total
showed last 75 words of 1097 total
Breedloves inflict pain upon themselves and each other. Morrison stresses the inevitability of their misfortunes, since they "started off split, no good," and how their inability to enjoy life distances them form reality (36). The racism which they accept as truth "limits the delight of things not related to it,"confining them to lives of pain, sorrow, and ugliness which ultimately produces the demise of each Breedlove- to denial, to escape, to insanity, and to death (37).
Breedloves inflict pain upon themselves and each other. Morrison stresses the inevitability of their misfortunes, since they "started off split, no good," and how their inability to enjoy life distances them form reality (36). The racism which they accept as truth "limits the delight of things not related to it,"confining them to lives of pain, sorrow, and ugliness which ultimately produces the demise of each Breedlove- to denial, to escape, to insanity, and to death (37).