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The Bluest Eye By Jacqueline Woodson

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Although written decades apart, Jacqueline Woodson’s Another Brooklyn and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye both explore the trials and tribulations that young black girls must endure as they begin to step into womanhood. While the burdens that the protagonists in each of these texts differ in some key ways, one of the most interesting things that both Woodson and Morrison depicted was a sense of difficulty in coping with these changes, and rather than having any semblance of mastery over their circumstances, these young protagonists would instead project their emotions onto something else as they try to discover what causes their suffering. Morrison’s The Bluest Eye, for example, features this prominently throughout the text as Pecola sets …show more content…

Junior, Geraldine’s son, loathes this cat, as the text states, “[as Junior] grew older, he learned how to direct his hatred of his mother to the cat, and spent some happy moments watching it suffer” (Morrison 86). This section not only serves as another example of projection from a developing, young, black character, but more importantly, it also sets up the expectation for this cat to be loved. Later in the text, Pecola finally goes to Junior’s home to see the cat, and Junior promptly throws the cat in her face and locks them both in a room (89-90). But as Pecola stays in the sealed room, something odd begins to happen. She looks down at the cat, and the text gives us a description of the cat as “black all over, deep silky black, and his eyes, pointing down toward his nose, were bluish green” (90). Originally, then, the cat’s eyes are described as bluish green—until Pecola sees the light hit them in a certain way, then they shift to blue. The text continues, “The light made them shine like blue ice. Pecola rubbed the cat’s head; he whined, his tongue flicking with pleasure. The blue eyes in the black face held her” (90). Notably, the moment that the light changes the eyes of the cat to blue, Pecola begins to show it affection, and the cat begins to show signs of happiness. Notably, past this point in the text, at least for the remainder of when the cat is mentioned, he is always given the description of having blue eyes rather

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