Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye at 50: a novel that speaks to our times

  • 5/10/2020
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his week, amazingly, I read a book. Just the one, though – let’s not get excited. I suspect I was only able to do so because I wasn’t reading for pleasure, but because I’ve been asked to write a foreword for it. The book I read was The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, a novel about a young, dark-skinned girl growing up in the US after the Great Depression who believes herself to be ugly; she wishes for blue eyes in the hope that they will make her beautiful. I had started to read it a few years ago, but was so overwhelmed that I had to put it down. This time, I knew, contractually, that I was going to tackle it head on. Usually I blitz through a book. But it’s Toni isn’t it, so you’ve got to gear yourself up for heartbreak, some trauma, and also to learn some things about yourself, and human nature, that you’d rather not be faced with. If she did one thing impeccably, it was holding a mirror up to society and saying: “Look at how we live. Are you proud of that?” And the answer cannot always be yes. The Bluest Eye, Morrison’s debut, is about so many things: self-worth; poverty; finding joy where there should really be none; beauty in its many forms; beauty being given, and taken away. To have written such a thing as your first novel is unbelievable. But that’s what Morrison was: so completely unbelievable that 50 years on, The Bluest Eye exposes the truth in the same way it did when it was first published.

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