Sabtu, 21 Desember 2013



ENGLISH PROSE

ANALYSIS OF “THE BLUEST EYE” NOVEL
BY
TONI MORRISON
To fulfill  the final assignment of English prose

Lecturer :
STKIP WARNA BARUAang Fatihul Islam, M.Pd







By :

By :
Febriana Lestari
NIM. 087108


ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
2008 E


SEKOLAH TINGGI KEGURUAN DAN ILMU PENDIDIKAN
PERSATUAN GURU REPUBLIK INDONESIA
JOMBANG
2011
TABLE OF CONTENT

TITLE ..................................................................................................................... i
TABLE OF CONTENT ....................................................................................... ii

CHAPTER I.   INTRODUCTION
A.  Background of the Study ............................................................................ 1
B.  Statement of the problem ............................................................................ 2
C.  Purpose Of the study .................................................................................. 2
CHAPTER II. ............................... THEORITICAL OF FRAMEWORK
A.  Literature   ................................................................................................... 4
B.  Prose          ................................................................................................... 5
C.  Novel         ................................................................................................... 6
D.  Biography of Toni Morrison ................................................................         7
E.   The Bluest Eye ............................................................................................ 7
CHAPTER III. ANALYSIS
A.  The theme of the novel “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison .............. ..... 12           
B.  The major of the novel “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison...................... 13
C.  The plot of the novel “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison........................ 16
D.  The point of view of the novel “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison......... 18
E.   The moral value of the novel “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison............ 19
CHAPTER IV. CLOSING
A.    Conclusion ........................................................................................... ..... 21
B.    Suggestion                                                                                             .........             22
REFERENCES



CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION

A.      BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Literature is the art. It is the result of human thinking that talks about something beautiful and crucial in human life. Without literature, human life will never be wonderful.
Based on the textual meaning of literature that is stated on the Oxford dictionary, literature is written artistic works, especially those with a high and lasting artistic value. In many essays of Hernady, 1978, he says that literature is to speak sweepingly one can say, summerizing, that in antiquity and in the Rennaissance, literature or letter was understood to include all writing quality with any pretence to permanence ( Wellek, 1978 : 20 ).
It is a canon which consists of those works in language by which community defines itself through the course of its history. A literature includes works primarily artistic and also those whose aestheic qualities are only secondary. The self defining activity of the community is conducted in the late of works, as its members have come to read them (or concreize them). (McFadden, 1978: 56).
To measure an understanding about the works of art, people deal with the way to analyze or criticize the works, then we call it as literary appreciation. Everybody understands that to do an appreciation of literary works is not a simple thing, which we can do it in a short time. We have to recognize well about the elements embedded in them, for doing an appreciation of literary works  is not a guess work but we need the rules that support us to have a good appreciation.
It has been a chalenge so far ,because the way people interpret/ appreciate something that in this case is literature and its works is different in some ways. People have their own prototype or definition to make it easier to understand and analyze. It is a kind of a hard work of rhethoric. There are many kinds of literary works, such as novel, shot story, poems, lyrics of songs, and etc. In this study, the researcher makes it spcified into one of them. It is novel.
Novel is a form of prose that is longer than short story, yet its elements are the same as the short story. We have a theme, setting, plot, characters,and message. In this discussion, the writer would like to conduct an analysis of prose in the form of novel entitled “ The Bluest Eye ” by Toni Morrison.
The Bluest Eye is a 1970 novel by American author Toni Morrison. It is Morrison's first novel, written while Morrison was teaching at Howard University and was raising her two sons on her own. The story is about a year in the life of a young black girl in Lorain, Ohio, named Pecola. It takes place against the backdrop of America's Midwest as well as in the years following the Great Depression. The Bluest Eye is told from the perspective of Claudia MacTeer as a child and an adult, as well as from a third-person, omniscient viewpoint. The novel is  quiet controversial. It deals with racism, incest, and child molestation (www.wikipedia.com).
For all the reasons above, the researcher would like to construct a discussion entitled “Analysis Of The Novel “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison”.

B.       STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
Based on the background of the study above, the researcher would like to formulate the problem as follows:
1.      What is the theme of novel “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison?
2.      How is the major characters of the novel entitled  “ The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison ?
3.      How is the plot of the novel entitled  “ The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison?
4.      How is the point of view on the novel entitled  “ The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison ?
5.      What is the moral value of the novel “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison ?

C.      PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
This paper aims to :
1.    Understand the theme of the novel entitled “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison.
2.    Understand the major caharcters of the novel entitled “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison.
3.    Understand the plot of the novel entitled “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison.
4.    Understand the point of view of the novel entitled “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison.
5.    Understand the moral value of the novel entitled “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison.























CHAPTER II
THEORITICAL OF FRAMEWORK

A.      LITERATURE
Literature is the body of written works of language, period, or culture such as poetry, novels, essays,etc, especially works of imagination / creativity in a writing that is characterized by excellence of style and expression and by themes / general enduring interest.
Many people have their own understandings of literature itself, but we need to say it in one that those understandings have their meaning which actually concerns on something the same, namely all about art in a language.
According to Mc.Fadden (1978 : 56), literature is a canon which consists of those works in language by which a community defines its self through the course of its history. It includes works primaly artistic and also those whose aesthetic qualities are only secondary. The self defining activity of community is conducted in the light of works as its members have come to read them (concretize them).
It becomes quiet challenging to discuss the definition and the meaning of literature. Definition based on criteria which all literary works must meet. However, more current theories of meaning take the view that definitions are based on prototypes. In short, the definitions below show what literature is :
1.      written text
2.      marked by careful use of language,including features such as creative metaphors, well turned phrases, elegant syntax, rhyme, alliteration, meter
3.       in literary genre (poetry, prose fiction, or drama)
4.      read aesthetically
5.      intended by the author to be read aesthetically
6.      Contains many weak inplicatures (are deliberately somewhat open in an interpretation)(Jim Meyer, 1997 :04).
In one discussion of literature, we have to take the clear cut of diffaerence  among some terms related to literature itself, like literary and literary appreciation because in this study, the researcher conducts a literary appreciation that absolutely deals with those terms and all elements beyond them.
Previously, we just discussed the definition and understanding of literature, and concerning to teh next term, namely literary. So, literary is the system of natures of literature and the methods for analyzing literature. We know the characteristic of literary works which we interpret whenever we study the system of the object. Then we need a way to critisize or do appreciation on the works. We call it literary appreciation.
Literary appreciation is the evaluation of works of imaginative literature as an intellectual or academic exercise. It is a process by which a reader interprets, evaluates / classifies a literary work with a view to determine the artistic /demerits of such a work. (Tayo Ogunlewe, 2006 : 88).

B.       PROSE
Prose is the ordinary form of spoken and written language whose unit is the sentence, rather than the line as it is in poetry. The term applies to all expressions in language that do not have a regular rhythmic pattern.
The term is from the Latin prosa, meaning in phrase which was derived from prosa oratio, meaning "straight, direct, unadorned speech, which itself was derived from prorsus, meaning  straightforward  or direct and can be further traced to pro versum, meaning turned forward”.
Prose is considered one of the two major literary structures, with the other being verse. Prose as one of the forms of literary works is classified into some other kinds. Novels, essays, short stories, and works of criticism are the examples of it. And novel is going to be elaborated more in this discussion for it is the subject of the study.
To get more understanding about prose, we have to learn to know the elements of prose that will be used to have critical analysis of a literary work. The elements are :
1.      Plot
It is the sequence or order of events in a story. The plot includes:
Ø Exposition Statement - The part of the plot that tells how the story begins.
Ø Rising Action - The action in the story leading up to the climax.
Ø Conflict - Struggles or problems between opposing forces.
Ø Climax - The point of crisis in the plot. It may be the reader’s point of highest interest.
Ø Falling action - The action in the story after the climax is revealed.
Ø Resolution - The part of the plot that reveals the final outcome.
2.      Setting
It  is the time and place in which a work of literature happens.
3.      Action
It is what a character does in a play, short story, or a fiction prose. Please note that actions are different from acts which are any of the main sections of a play or other dramatic performance.
4.      Point of view
It is the story teller from whose point of view the story is being told, the narrator.
5.      Characterization
It is the description of the personalities of the characters in the story and the way in which an author reveals their personalities.
6.      Theme is the main idea of a literary work, usually expressed as a generalization. A theme is a broad idea, message, or moral of a story.
7.      Message is value that the writer wants to deliver to the readers. It usually brings positive values.
C.      NOVEL
The word “novel” was originated in the early 18th century after the Italian word "novella" which was used for stories in the Medieval period (1000-1500). The 18th-century rise of the novel is a compound of several stories.
 Novel is one of the literary works that used by the authors to describe, express, and give social critics that happen in the surrounding. The relationship among men and women in the society is represented by the story through the characters inside it.

D.    BIOGRAPHY OF TONI MORRISON

Toni Morrison, the first black woman to receive Nobel Prize in Literature, was born Chloe Anthony Wofford on February 18, 1931 in Lorain, Ohio, U.S.A. She was the second of four children of George Wofford, a shipyard welder and Ramah Willis Wofford. Her parents moved to Ohio from the South to escape racism and to find better opportunities in the North. Her father was a hardworking and dignified man. While the children were growing up, he worked three jobs at the same time for almost 17 years. He took a great deal of pride in the quality of his work, so that each time he welded a perfect seam he'd also weld his name onto the side of the ship. He also made sure to be well-dressed, even during the Depression. Her mother was a church-going woman and she sang in the choir. At home, Chloe heard many songs and tales of Southern black folklore. The Woffords were proud of their heritage.

E.     THE BLUEST EYE
The Bluest Eye is split into an untitled prelude and four large units, each named after a season. The four larger units begin with "Autumn" and end in "Summer," with each unit being split into smaller sections. The first section of each season is narrated by Claudia MacTeer, a woman whose memories frame the events of the novel. At the time that the main events of the plot take place, Claudia is a nine-year-old girl. This device allows Morrison to employ a reflective adult narrator without losing the innocent perspective of a child. Claudia MacTeer lives with her parents and her sister in the humble MacTeer family house in Lorrain, Ohio. The year is 1939.
The novel's focus, however, is on a girl named Pecola Breedlove. Pecola, we are told in the prelude, will be raped by her father by novel's end. The prelude frames the story so that the reader knows from the beginning that Pecola's story ends tragically. The Breedloves are poor, unhappy, and troubled. Their story seems in many ways to be deterministic, as they are often the victims of forces over which they have no control. Their situation is a powerful contrast to the MacTeers, who are of slender means but have a strong family unit. The MacTeers also seem to have much stronger agency, and are never really passive victims in the way that the Breedloves are.
When Claudia is not narrating, a third-person narrator takes her place. The narrative style, even in third person, is one of great psychological intimacy. The third-person narrator of The Bluest Eye is no dispassionate observer, but one who gives insights into the thoughts of characters and occasionally interprets events in a very explicit manner. The sections narrated in the third person are all focused on some aspect of Pecola's life‹the sections explore either a family member or a specific significant event. These sections have headings, taken from a reading primer's Dick and Jane story. The use of the primer is a biting comment on the distance between Pecola's life and the pink-skinned bourgeois world in the Dick and Jane story. Each heading is a clean, straightforward match up: the section about Pecola's house is headed by a Dick-and-Jane sentence about their house, the section about Pauline is prefaced by a Dick-and-Jane sentence about their mother, etc.
The basic plot is very simple: when Cholly Breedlove, Pecola's father, attempts to burn their house down, Pecola is sent by social workers to stay temporarily with the MacTeers. Claudia and Frieda befriend the girl, who is lonely, abused, and neglected. While staying with the MacTeers, she menstruates for the first time. Her first period, as the reader must consider it, becomes an upsetting event‹it makes it possible for her to be impregnated later by her own father. Pecola Breedlove goes back to live with her family, and we see aspects of her life depicted one section at a time. The Breedlove home is a converted storefront, cold and in disrepair. Pauline and Cholly Breedlove fight incessantly and with terrifying ferocity‹their battles always end up being physical‹and her brother Sammy runs away from home constantly. The Breedloves' name is suggestive and ironic: "love" is exactly what the family lacks, and certainly they are unable to generate more of it, as suggested by the word "breed." Instead, "breed" becomes an ominous reference to what Cholly ends up doing with his own daughter.
Pauline is an unhappy woman who takes refuge in the wrathful and unforgiving aspects of Christianity. She lavishes her love on the white family for whom she works, while her own family lives in squalor. Cholly is an angry and irresponsible man, violent, cruel, and uncontrollable. All of the Breedloves are considered ugly, although part of the novel's work is to question and deconstruct what that ugliness really means. To get away from her parents and to pass the hours, Pecola spends a great deal of time with the whores who live upstairs. China, Poland, and Marie tolerate her presence without providing any deep love for the girl.
Pecola is obsessed, we learn, with blue eyes. She prays for them constantly, and is convinced that by making her beautiful the blue eyes would change her life. From Pecola's wish and from many other events in the novel, it becomes clear that most of the people in Lorrain's black community consider whiteness beautiful and blackness ugly. The novel has many character who long to look white, and also has several characters of mixed ancestry who emulate whites and try to suppress all things in themselves that might be African. Soaphead Church's Anglophile family and Geraldine are examples of this kind of black person.
The MacTeer family goes through their own small dramas, as Frieda and Claudia deal with stuck-up schoolmates and a lecherous boarder. Consistently, the MacTeer family is able to insulate the girls from harm. When their boarder, a man named Mr. Henry, makes an indecent pass at eleven-year-old Frieda, Mr. and Mrs. MacTeer react with force, protecting their daughter violently and without any doubt of her innocence. In contrast, in the Breedlove family the sexual threat comes not from outside the family unit but from within. One Saturday in spring, Cholly rapes Pecola. He rapes her a second time soon afterward. Pecola then becomes pregnant with her father's child.
Miserable and desperate, Pecola believes more than ever that blue eyes would change her life. She goes to a pedophilic fortune-teller named Soaphead Church to ask for blue eyes. Soaphead Church decides that he can use her for a small task, and so he uses an unwitting Pecola to kill a dog that he hates. She completes the task, which she believes will be like a transformative spell. The dog dies in a gruesome manner, and Pecola runs away in terror. The next time we see Pecola, she's lost her mind. She spends all of her time talking to a new "friend"; he/she is an imaginary friend who is now the only person with whom Pecola speaks. The topic of conversation is most frequently the blueness of Pecola's eyes. Pecola spends the rest of her life as a madwoman.
The title of the novel provides some interesting insights about standards of beauty. Morrison is interested in showing the illusory nature of the social construction of beauty, which is created in part by the imaginary world of advertising billboards and movie stars. The title uses the superlative of blue because at the end of the novel, when Pecola has gone mad, she is obsessed with having the bluest eyes of anyone living. But the title also has "eye" in the singular‹by disembodying the eye, Morrison subverts the idea of beauty or standards of beauty, tearing the idealized part away from the whole, creating a beauty icon that is not even human. Reinforcing this non-human aspect of the ideal eye, Pecola's new blue eyes at the novel's end are not described with colors in the human range‹her eyes are blue like streaks of cobalt, or more blue than the sky itself.
At key points in the novel, important plot information is revealed through gossip. Morrison writes long stretches of beautiful and uninterrupted dialogue, with great sensitivity to oral language. Pauline Breedlove gets a chance to speak in the first person near the middle of the novel; in a section divided between third-person narrator and Pauline, she gets to address the reader directly and in dialect. Morrison's interest in carving a place for oral language in literary art is readily apparent in this novel.
Morrison occasionally switches tense, moving fluidly to present tense when it serves her. The move has different effects: for some scenes, it provides a sense of great immediacy. In one sequence narrated by Claudia, it creates the feel that Claudia is reliving the experience. In other scenes, it creates the feel of a pattern. When Pecola tries to by candy at a local grocer's, we read about the moment in present tense. In this case, Morrison's use of the present tense suggests that the unpleasant interaction between Pecola and the shopkeeper forms a template for all of her interactions with other human beings.
Morrison, by employing multiple narrators, is trying to make sure that no single voice becomes authoritative. The gossiping women become narrators in their own right, relaying critical information and advancing the story at key points. Claudia's perspective is balanced by the third person narrator, and Pauline Breedlove narrates for parts of one of the middle sections of the novel. This method of multiplying narrative perspectives also demands more active participation on the part of the reader, who must reassemble the parts in order to see the whole. Morrison is still working somewhat clumsily with this type of narrative in The Bluest Eye. In later novels, she has a chance to experiment and refine her forms further.













CHAPTER III
ANALYSIS

A.      THE THEME OF “THE BLUEST EYE” BY TONI MORRISON
Theme is the major idea of a story. It is the important part of prose element that can not be separated from a story because without a theme, a story  can not be formed. It controls the atmosphere and crucial over all idea of what is the story all about.
The theme of Toni Morrison’s novel “The Bluest Eye” is about racism or capitalism, especifically from the perspective of the black people experience in the United States. In general, the view of the characters in the novel is that the world is run by and for white people, especially white people with power and property, and that black people, particularly poor black people, are hurt in many ways by this racist, capitalist system.
One of the most destructive results of this racist, capitalist system is that black people come to feel so negatively about themselves and their race that they long to be white. The character of Pecola portrays this self-hatred and its destructive effects.
Toni Morrison clearly believes that every aspect of racism to be destructive to the victim of racism, but she does not argue that everything about capitalism is destructive. What is destructive is the difficulty faced by blacks who want to share in any meaningful way in that capitalist system that “Being a minority in both caste and class, we moved about”.
The Bluest Eye is a kind novel that describes a strangeness and violence to the black girl named Pecola that happened in America. She was mocked and discriminated because her appearance was not the same as the beauty concept that was assumed in America. The discrimination that Toni Morrison delivers through this novel seems very real. According to United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women /CEDAW, a discrimination is  any distinction, exclusion or restriction made on the basis of sex which has the effect or purpose of impairing or nullifying the recognition, enjoyment or exercise  by women, irrespective of their marital status, on a basis of equality of men and women, of human rights and fundamental fredoms in the political, economics, social, cultural, civil or any other field (http: //www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/cedaw/text).
The discrimination and the strangeness that is described by this novel was not only done by the white people but also the blacks that had a high social class. Their attitude done by them made Pecolla felt strange in her surrounding even from her family.

B.       THE MAJOR CHARACTERS OF “THE BLUEST EYE” BY TONI MORRISON

1.      Pecola Breedlove

Pecola is twelve years old. Her family lives in a converted storefront. She is considered ugly, and is emotionally and socially awkward. She prays for blue eyes, because she knows from images in movies and on candy wrappers that to have blue eyes is to be loved. She is raped by her father, Cholly, in the spring, and becomes pregnant. Her baby comes too early and dies. Terrified of her parents, she is not free (due to gender and age) to run away from home as Sammy does. Either during the pregnancy or after the miscarriage, Pecola goes mad, manufacturing an imaginary friend who becomes her only conversation partner.
2.      Claudia MacTeer
The first-person narrator of the first section in each of the four units. Claudia is nine years old, extremely bright, and comes from a loving family that owns their own house. She is warm-hearted and sensitive, but she is also angered by injustice and instinctively feels threatened by the standards of beauty that glorify Shirley Temple while ignoring black children. As a narrator, she fluctuates between an adult voice and a child's‹without problems.
3.      Frieda MacTeer
Claudia's sister, age 11. Frieda makes important decisions at several places in the novel, and she is the clear leader of the MacTeer sisters. Like her sister, she is sensitive and concerned about Pecola, and is willing to stand up for herself and others. She is the more fearless of the two girls.
4.      Pauline Breedlove
Mother of Sammy and Pecola, wife to Cholly. She has a lame foot and a missing front tooth. She is harsh and abusive to her children. She lavishes her love on the Fishers, her generous white employers, while her own family falls apart. She and Cholly battle constantly. Although once she longed to have nicer things and romantic love, she settles into surviving through her work and being a martyr by staying with Cholly. She is religious in a vindictive and vengeful way, hoping that the Lord will help her in her war against Cholly.
5.      Cholly Breedlove
A violent drunk, an unfaithful husband, an abusive father. Cholly was humiliated by white hunters when a young boy, and the shame stuck with him. Abandoned by both of his parents, he has no concept of parenting. He rapes Pecola, skipping town when she becomes pregnant.
6.      Mrs. MacTeer
Mother to Frieda and Claudia. She is not an indulgent mother, but she is fiercely protective and loving. Her word is law with the two girls‹at several points the girls attempt to decide what to do based on literal interpretations of things Mrs. MacTeer has said.
7.      Mr. MacTeer
Father to Frieda and Claudia. Like his wife, he is a harsh but loving parent.
8.      Sammy Breedlove
An unhappy and young teenage boy, constantly in trouble, constantly running away from home for months at a time. Unlike Pecola, he has freedom, as a male, to escape the Breedloves' miserable home life.
9.      Soaphead Church (aka Elihu Whitcomb)
A man of mixed white and black ancestry from the Caribbean. He is the town fortuneteller, in addition to being megalomaniacal pedophile who plays God. His "magic" is the final snap that breaks Pecola's sanity.
10.  Bertha Reese
An old, religious woman from whom Soaphead Church rents his room. She is the owner of Bob, the dog that Soaphead Church loathes.
11.  Mr. Henry
The middle-aged boarder taken in by the MacTeers near the beginning of the novel. Mr. Henry is charming but is somewhat lecherous‹he invites prostitutes under the MacTeer roof when the MacTeers are gone, and later he makes sexual advances at eleven-year-old Frieda.
12.  China, Poland, and Marie (aka the Maginot Line)
The three prostitutes who live upstairs from Pecola. Pecola seeks refuge in their company when her family is too unbearable. All three women are long past their prime, but fat Marie is the most despised by Mrs. MacTeer and the most feared by Frieda and Claudia. Their names are heavily symbolic, as all three refer to countries where are occupied or facing invasion by fascist armies in 1939.
13.  Geraldine
A well-off black woman with a husband, one son, and a cat. Geraldine is concerned with being respectable, and despises poor blacks. When her son, Louis, Jr., lies to her and tells her that Pecola killed Geraldine's beloved cat, her treatment of Pecola is brutal.
14.  Louis, Jr.
a little boy, son of Geraldine. He tricks Pecola into coming into his house, where he throws a cat in her face, kills the cat, and then blames her for it.
15.  Maureen Peal
The new girl at school. She is mulatto and very well-off. Walking home with the MacTeer sisters and Pecola one day, she starts out being civil but very quickly becomes haughty. She is the darling of teachers, and Claudia sees in her all of the social forces that she fears and despises. Claudia insists that the societal forces are more to be feared and hated than Maureen herself.
16.  Mr. Yacobowski
A store owner who sells Pecola nine pieces of Mary Jane candy. Pecola can read in his eyes the impatience and disdain that he feels for her, and she internalizes all of it.
17.  Rosemary
A girl who lives next door. A tattletale. Claudia and Frieda dislike her immensely.
18.  Miss Dunion
A nosy neighbor who lives next door. When she insinuates that Mr. Henry might have "ruined" Frieda, she incites the wrath of Mrs. MacTeer.
  1. Great Aunt Jimmy
The woman who raised Cholly. She was already ancient when she took him in, right after he had been abandoned by his own mother. She dies when Cholly is a young teenage boy.
20.  M'Dear
An old wise woman who comes to give Aunt Jimmy medical advice. She is a tall woman, and her authority is considered infallible. Sure enough, when Aunt Jimmy violates one of M'Dear's prescriptions, she dies.
21.  Samson Fuller
Possibly Cholly's father. When Cholly is a young man, he tracks Samson down. Samson humiliates him and tells him to go away.
22.  Blue Jack
The closest thing to a father figure in Cholly's early life. He shares a watermelon heart with Cholly and it's one of the happiest moments Cholly ever knows.

C.      THE PLOT OF “THE BLUEST EYE” NOVEL BY TONI MORRISON
Here is the plot of “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison, that we can understand this novel has progressive and flashback plot (mixed).

1.      Initial Situation

Pecola's home environment is abusive and tumultuous.

As the novel begins, we see that Pecola's family life is violent and lacking in structure, love, and support. When Cholly hits Pauline and nearly burns their house down, Mrs. Breedlove moves in with her employer, leaving her children to fend for themselves. Pecola gets sent to stay with the MacTeers while she waits for her parents to handle their problems.

  1. Conflict
Pecola believes that blue eyes will change her life.
Pecola begins to believe that if she only had blue eyes, her family life would be completely different and people would love her. This erroneous belief – that by changing your physical appearance you could change your familial, psychological, and social situation in life – consumes Pecola throughout the novel
  1. Complication
Pecola is repeatedly teased and abused. It's going to take far more than blue eyes to change this girl's life. She is teased at school, gets punched in the face, Junior attacks her with a cat, and she ruins her mom's berry cobbler. Pecola's victimization is building here.Cholly rapes Pecola.As if things couldn't get any worse for Pecola, when she is raped by her own father, all hope that she might actually develop self-esteem or self-sufficiency flies out the window.

4.      Suspense

Pauline and Pecola move to the edge of town.

Pecola spends her days talking to herself in the mirror, flailing her arms like a bird and sifting through garbage. It's unclear whether or not she is crazy, and how much she actually remembers of being raped by her father. It's also unclear how many times he raped her.

5.      Conclusion

Claudia and Frieda ignore Pecola.



At the novel's end, Claudia acknowledges that she and all of the townspeople of Lorain are partially to blame for what happened to Pecola. They do not ignore her out of fear or disgust, but because they feel responsible for what she has become. They have failed her.

D.    POINT OF VIEW IN THE NOVEL “THE BLUEST EYE” BY TONI MORRISON
This novel has first person and third person point of view. The first person point of view is called central narrator, while the third person is called omniscient. Below are the explanation of it :
First Person (Central Narrator)
Claudia provides the bulk of the narration in the book. This is convenient because she actually witnessed what happened to Pecola as well as the way the town spoke about her, and she makes sure to include snatches of these conversations in her narration.
Claudia narrates her story from two different perspectives. In the Prologue and final chapter, the adult Claudia uses the past tense to describe events that happened back in 1941 in Lorain. But for the bulk of her narration, Claudia uses the present tense to describe these events, which has the effect of showing us things through her 9-year-old eyes.
Occasionally Claudia will move between the two modes, allowing us to see how she is reflecting on her own experience and highlighting the act of narration. Claudia is a highly empathetic narrator, and while she doesn't have access to the minds of the people she describes, she does her best to try to understand them, especially Pecola.
Third Person (Omniscient)
In the chapters that deal with the Breedloves and the one featuring Soaphead Church, the narrator isn't Claudia, but rather a third-person omniscient narrator. This speaker is capable of moving through extreme distances of space and time. This is the voice that tells us the long history of the Breedloves' storefront, details Cholly's early sexual humiliation, and recounts Soaphead's journey from the West Indies to America.
The third-person style is useful in a book with so many complex characters. It allows us to watch their lives unfold over time, in ways we could never do if Claudia were the sole narrator.

E.     THE MORAL VALUE OF THE NOVEL “THE BLUEST EYE” BY TONI MORRISON
The Bluest eye tells the story of a group of Americans, men and women and children who are descendants of slaves, and live in a society where, even though many people deny it, the color of your skin determines who you are and what privileges you are entitled to. I think that Morrison does a wonderful job of telling a story that is real, that makes the reader feel something, and that makes the reader relate, regardless of your skin color.
I cannot say that I can relate to what it must have felt like for Pecola to be called a "a nasty little black bitch" and accused of killing a cat when she did nothing. But, I can say that I know what it is like to feel ugly and scared. Pecola is an extreme example of a person who is treated horribly by everyone she encounters, whether it is because she is black or ugly or both. Her mother ignores her, her father rapes her, her friends betray her, little boys and girls and adults call her names, and even a cat and a dog are killed in her presence. All of these things are experienced by people all of the time, however, it might not be as extreme or it might just be one or two of the things. Something that seems as trivial as name calling is something that happens to all Americans.
In this novel, Morrison takes American experiences and characteristics, such as violence, growing up, love, family, hatred, race, beauty and ugliness, and illustrates them in a way that is so clear, yet so painful. These American experiences are not covered up or toned down to seem less serious; they are real and they are heart-breaking. Every one of Morrison's characters can be related to in one way or another because they are Americans and they are human. I think that Morrison sums up how The Bluest Eye impacted me in the following quote:

"So it was with confidence, strengthened by pity and pride, that we decided to change the course of events and alter a human life" (191). That is what Morrison did to me as I read this novel. Through her writing I was changed, and this, I believe, was Morrison's purpose. "Being a writer she thinks of language partly as a system, partly as a living thing over which one has control, but mostly as agency as an act with consequences"




























CHAPTER IV
CLOSING

A.      CONCLUSION
  1. The theme of Toni Morrison’s novel, “The Bluest Eye”,  is about racism or capitalism. It is shown from the perspective of the black people experience in the United States, that in this novel described by the main character, “Pecola” who has different appearance from others (white people).

2.      Based on the analysis of major characters in the novel of “The Bluest Eye”, we find there are twenty two characters with their own chracteristics that support the atmosphere of the story. They are : Pecola Breedlove, Claudia MacTeer, Frieda MacTeer, Pauline Breedlove, Cholly Breedlove, Mrs. MacTeer, Mr. MacTeer, Sammy Breedlove, Soaphead Church (aka Elihu Whitcomb), Bertha Reese, Mr. Henry, China, Poland, and Marie (aka the Maginot Line), Geraldine, Louis, Jr.Maureen Peal, Mr. Yacobowski, Rosemary,Miss Dunion, Great Aunt Jimmy, M'Dear, Blue Jack.

  1. The plot of this novel is a mixed one ( progressive and flashback ). We can summarize the story that a black girl named Pecolla wanted to be treated well by the people surrounding. Her different pshycical appearance was such a burden for her then she wished to have the blue eyes, like the white people who as if they were everything in this world and they could do anything they want. The flashback is shown by the story that pecolla was rapped by her father until she had a child with him. Yet the next part of the story tells about Pecolla’s childhood. That’s why the kind of plot in this novel is mixed between progressive and flashback.
  2. This novel has first person (central narrator) and third person point of view (omniscient).
  3. The moral value of the novel “The Bluest Eye” concerns on social life. The novel inspires us not to differ one person and the others because of their psychical appearance only. Every man has the human right , and need to be admitted in the society. We must not discriminate people because of the difference.

B.  SUGGESTION
1.      We must not discriminate people from their race or ethnic, because people have human right as human beings.
2.      We should grow tollerate each other because to be appreciated, we need to appreciate others.
3.      As a social beings, we have the norms, customs, and culture that those are all good. We must not see something from one side,  but we have to see everything in a ositive way that we can have a good social life.



















REFERENCE

Morrison, Toni.1970. The Bluest Eye. England : A plume book.

Luxemburg, Jan Van. 1991.Over Literature. Muiderberg : Dick Coutinho.
accessed on July 09,2011 at 16.00
accessed on July 01, 2011 at 15.45
http: //www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/cedaw/text
accessed on July 01, 2011 at 16.02