Li Jieping, Xu Jing. Paired Protagonists: an Interpretation of Morrison's The Bluest Eye[J]. Journal of Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics Social Sciences Edition, 2014, (6): 92-95. DOI: 10.13766/j.bhsk.1008-2204.2014.0018
Citation:
Li Jieping, Xu Jing. Paired Protagonists: an Interpretation of Morrison's The Bluest Eye[J]. Journal of Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics Social Sciences Edition, 2014, (6): 92-95. DOI: 10.13766/j.bhsk.1008-2204.2014.0018
Li Jieping, Xu Jing. Paired Protagonists: an Interpretation of Morrison's The Bluest Eye[J]. Journal of Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics Social Sciences Edition, 2014, (6): 92-95. DOI: 10.13766/j.bhsk.1008-2204.2014.0018
Citation:
Li Jieping, Xu Jing. Paired Protagonists: an Interpretation of Morrison's The Bluest Eye[J]. Journal of Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics Social Sciences Edition, 2014, (6): 92-95. DOI: 10.13766/j.bhsk.1008-2204.2014.0018
Paired Protagonists: an Interpretation of Morrison's The Bluest Eye
The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison creatively uses paired protagonists and paralleled narrative structure so as to break the bonds of traditional Bildungsroman in terms of form, content and significance. She vividly presents the difficult growing experience of black women, at the same time she makes the genre of Bildungsroman more complex with a new social significance.