• Home
  • Blog
  • Write a paper outline about the book Bluest Eye

Write a paper outline about the book Bluest Eye

0 comments

Hi I will be writing a paper about the book the Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison and for tomorrow I need to write:

– the thesis statement of my paper

– a paper outline.

Please read the summary of each chapter of the book https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/bluesteye/ before doing so.

These are the instruction that I will be using for my paper, just for you to understand what he is asking.

The paper topics below include an array of listed questions designed to help you brainstorm ideas for your paper, but you do not have to answer any of these questions, and you definitely should not answer each question sequentially within your paper. Ideally, your essay should include a detailed analysis of particular elements in the selected text(s)—its language, its characters, its symbols, its setting, its style, its subtext, its context, and/or its imagery. Your analysis of selected details should address a larger problem or theme at work in the text(s) as a whole. The essay’s argument will come out of your understanding of the particular fit between textual details and the overall argument as you see it. I strongly encourage you to write on a topic that speaks to you in some way. Be specific in your responses, quote directly from the text where appropriate, and remember to cite accurately all sources in your paper using MLA format. Most importantly, make sure that your essay is carefully organized, has a clear and focused argumentative thesis, adheres to the rules of grammar, and closely analyzes textual evidence.

In her “Forward,” Toni Morrison claims, “Beauty was not simply something to behold; it was something one could do” (xi). With The Bluest Eye, Morrison aims, in part, to uncover not only the ways in which beauty has been created but also the ways that beauty has been withheld and denied from an entire race and how such aesthetic demonization works to promote racial self-loathing and contempt.Considering Morrison’s goal, discuss the connection between cultural notions of beauty and racial self-loathing in the novel via an analysis of one or two characters. How does racial self-hatred corrode the lives of Pecola and her parents (Cholly and Pauline Breedlove)? How does it manifest itself in characters like Maureen Peal, Geraldine, and Soaphead Church?

About the Author

Follow me


{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}