The girl, whose wish for the eyes of a white girl revealed her contempt for her own racial identity, raised troubling questions about beauty and oppression. In a new Afterword to the novel's 1993 reprint, Morrison says that she got the idea for The Bluest Eye in part from an elementary school classmate. This new standard was meant to be racially inclusive, allowing blacks to see black as beautiful, but the need to argue for this new standard reveals how firmly the white standard of beauty was entrenched. After centuries of coveting white dolls and decades of longing to look like Caucasian Hollywood stars (and thinking that it was perfectly appropriate to do so), Black-Americans began to argue for a new standard of beauty. One of those transformations was a new recognition of Black-American beauty. It was written, as one can see from the dates, during the years of some of the most dynamic and turbulent transformations of Afro-American life. Morrison began Pecola's story as a short piece in 1962 it became a novel-in-progress by 1965. Published in 1970, The Bluest Eye came about at a critical moment in the history of American civil rights.
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