Thursday, January 23, 2020
The Character of Cholly in The Bluest Eye Essay -- Bluest Eye Essays
      The Character of Cholly in The Bluest Eye           Morrison has divided her portrayal of a fictional town of blacks, which  suffers from alienation and subjugation, into four seasons.  I believe that  her underlying message is to illustrate the reality of life's travails: the  certain rhythms of blessings and tragedies.  Some blacks understand and  acccept this philosophy and Morrison's use of the seasons portrays and echoes  the bible verse, "To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose  under the heaven"(Ec. 3.1).  Perhaps this is a fatalistic approach or as  Darrow says,           Man is the product of heredity and environment and that he acts as his  machine responds to outside stimuli and nothing else, seem amply proven by the  evolution and history of man.  Every process of nature and life is a  continuous sequence of cause and effect (156).            This theory is particularly evident in Morrison's development of  Cholly, the man who raped his daughter.  She could have portrayed him as a  degenerate akin to Soaphead, a slimy character, who leaves us with a feeling of  revulsion.  Instead, step-by-step, she leads us through Cholly's life and  experiences; so in the end, instead of hating him, we feel his pain.                  Cholly is introduced in the first  chapter.  He is the father of Pecola.  Because of his actions, the  whole family has been put out of their home.  It was a miserable apartment,  as ugly in appearance as the family.  Except for Cholly.  In his youth  he had been big strong long limbed and full of his own fire.  Now his  behavior was his ugliness.  Years of despair, dissipation and...              ...ft pregnant with his child, and pushed to madness by these terrible  circumstances: she finds her beauty in the bluest eye.            I said in mine heart, God shall judge the righteous and the wicked; for there  is a time for every purpose and for every work (Ec. 17).  Morrison draws a  sympathetic picture of Cholly.  She blurs the reality and covers him with  emotional longing for the love he knew in the past.  Cholly has nothing  more to lose.  His life is a tragedy.            Works Cited           Darrow, Clarence."Crime and Free Will". Introductory Readings in Philosophy.  Ed. Marcus G. Singer and Robert R. Ammerman. New York: Scribner, 1962.   156-57.     Morrison, Toni.  The Bluest Eye. New York: Plume: 1994.     The New Chain Reference Bible. Ed. Frank Charles Thompson. Mt. Morris, N.Y:  Chain Reference Bible Publishing. 1929.                                  
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