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Trauma In The Bluest Eye

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Trauma is an event in an individual's life which is "defined by its intensity, by the subject's incapacity to respond adequately to it, and by the upheaval and long-lasting effects that it brings about in the psychical organization" (Dodge, Kenneth A., John E. Bates, and Gregory S. Petit). In Toni Morrison's, The Bluest Eye, it is demonstrated very clearly how just one unresolved act of trauma can lead to an almost never-ending cycle of tragedy in a community. The cycle of tragedy is easily transferred from parent to child, and its effects can be easily worsened by a lack of support from other people in the community. With some background knowledge on Pauline, the mother of Pecola, it’s easier to understand some of Pecola's core traits. There are parallelisms between Pecola and Pauline. They find their reality too harsh to deal with, so they become fixated on one thing that makes them happy, and they ignore everything else. Pecola's desire for blue eyes is more of an inheritance that she received from her mother. One of Pauline’s own obsessions was back when she was fascinated with the world of the big pictures. As long as they can believe in their fantasies, they're willing to sacrifice anything else. It all went downhill for …show more content…

They were disgusted, amused, shocked, outraged, or even excited by the story. “But we listened for the ones who would say, “Poor little girl,” or “Poor baby,” but there was only head-wagging where those words should've been” (Morrison 190). This continues with the fundamental idea that the community only seems to care on a shallow level. The real-life struggles of people turn into the town’s local gossip. Unfortunately, most people see this information as a new type of entertainment and see the people involved as just characters. In a sense, they refuse to view the lower class as people

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