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The Bluest Eye

The Bluest Eye. Kelly ‘Butterfly’ Sackley. Today’s Awesome Goals. To better prepare student for a changing world by making sure they graduate with the flexible skills they need to be leaders in our communities and better able to deal with a state and country that are more culturally diverse

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The Bluest Eye

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  1. The Bluest Eye Kelly ‘Butterfly’ Sackley

  2. Today’s Awesome Goals • To better prepare student for a changing world by making sure they graduate with the flexible skills they need to be leaders in our communities and better able to deal with a state and country that are more culturally diverse • To learn to make real-life ethical choices • To practice replacing fear and greed with love, tolerance, compassion, and the sympathetic imagination • To practice tolerance for diversity of personality types and races/ethnic groups

  3. Today’s Awesome Topic • Racism and judging by appearance

  4. Today’s Awesome Blogs • Eric • Nature turned on the town • Retrospective look at her impact • Made him reevaluate life • Grace • Sister cut her hair off when she was little because of jealously • Has “skinny white girl guilt” • Study shows that African American kids still choose the white doll • Ian • Pathos most important rhetorical device • Didn’t read emotional lit in high school • All kids should read stuff like this because it changes opinions • Janie • Self-conscious as a kid because she had freckles and gapped teeth • Made her able to empathize with Pecola • Feels guilty that Pecola prayed for blue eyes because nobody should feel inadequate because of their appearance • Carson • Feels guilty for having blue eyes • Shame and fear that caused the feeling of ugliness in the characters • Morrison makes situation real • Amy • Importance of empowerment and being heard • Claudia is powerless because she’s a child and a minority • Not powerless to determine own definition of beauty • Everybody is beautiful in his or her own way • Andrew • Emotional response: depression, worthlessness, hopelessness • Characters are resigned to their situations • Children can be empathetic listeners • Bevin • There is a common standard of beauty • Being thin is a big deal • Thinks infatuation with Barbies when she was little skewed her views of beauty • Brooks • Feels guilty; like he is part of the cause of the problem • Racist values play a large role in identification of beauty for women • Pecola accepts it, Claudia does not

  5. More Awesome Blogs • Megan • Relates the topic to the AMAZING poetry slam some of us went to on Tuesday, and everyone should go to next week  • Beauty shouldn’t refer to color or physical attributes • Self-respect will lessen the effects of society’s ridiculous view on beauty • Paige • There’s more important things than beauty • Standard of beauty in society is not realistic • Our culture rejects so many different types of beauty and that’s sad, but beauty shouldn’t matter so much • Priya • Pecola’s vs. Claudia’s feelings toward little white girl dolls • Beauty is such a skewed concept • Worked for Girls Empowerment Network (super cool!) • Rachel • Understood racism through Toni Morrison’s writing in a way she hadn’t before • Will never fully understand how racism feels because has never been a target of it • Compared to Shirley Temple as a kid • Tatum • Every person in the world succumbs in some way to society’s wishes • Pecola vs. Claudia’s ideas of beauty • Need to eliminate racism within ourselves by accepting and appreciating our own beauty • Tori • Toni Morrison’s writing allows you to really experience racism and its effects • The metaphors she uses break stereotypes by connecting the readers to the people • Professor Bump • Need to redefine beauty • Mothers respond more to pretty babies, babies respond better to pretty mothers • Attractiveness is a stronger predictor of evaluations and behavioral attributes than ethnicity • Kendall • Whites used vague “Thing” to claim they were superior to blacks • Eventually black people began to believe they actually were inferior • Blacks began to build identity around this role which many of them accepted like Pecola • Kian • Every being has a purpose • Physical bodies are temporary, spirit is constant • Plastic surgery and materialism represent yearning for some deeper experience

  6. Today’s Awesome Questions • Was there ever a time when you perceived that you were being judged because of your appearance? • Do you feel that you gained new insight into the effects of racism? • Do you feel you are able to relate better to victims of discrimination after reading? • How did the part about Claudia and her baby doll make you feel about her and about white people in general? • Who do you think is the most sympathetic character and why? • How do you feel about the way society sees beauty today? • How do you think the ‘Dick and Jane’ story relates to the The Bluest Eye? Why do you think it sped up?

  7. More Awesome Questions • How would you explain Pecola’s low self-esteem? • What role does social class play in the novel? • What does the foreshadowing suggest will happen as the novel progresses to you? • What all does Shirley Temple represent to Pecola? To Claudia? • What do you think Toni Morrison’s view of beauty is as opposed to society’s view?

  8. END!!!!!

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