Summary and Analysis to page 32

Summary: 

Outside a Greek hotel, Rosemary Villanucci, a white neighbor of the MacTeer family, taunts Claudia and Frieda MacTeer from the Villanucci’s Buick. School has started, and the sisters are expected to help gather coal that has fallen out of the railroad cars. Their house is spacious but old, drafty, and infested with rodents. During one trip to gather coal, Claudia catches a cold. Her mother is angry but takes good care of Claudia, who does not understand that her mother is mad at the sickness, not her. Frieda comforts Claudia by singing to her—or at least Claudia remembers it this way. In hindsight, she also remembers the constant, implicit presence of love.

The MacTeers are getting a new boarder, Henry Washington. The children overhear their mother explaining that he was living with the elderly Della Jones but that she has grown too senile for him to stay there. Mrs. MacTeer also explains that Miss Jones’s husband ran off with another woman because he thought his wife smelled too clean. Henry has never married and has the reputation of being a steady worker. Mrs. MacTeer says the extra money will help her. When Henry arrives, the children adore him because he teases them and then does a magic trick: he offers them a penny but then makes it disappear so that the girls must find it hidden on his person.

There is also a second addition to the MacTeer household, Pecola Breedlove. She is temporarily in county custody because her father burned down the family’s house. Pecola is the object of pity because her father has put the family “outdoors,” one of the greatest sins by community standards. Having joined the MacTeers, Pecola loves drinking milk out of their Shirley Temple cup. Claudia explains that she has always hated Shirley Temple and also the blonde, blue-eyed baby doll that she was given for Christmas. She is confused about why everyone else thinks such dolls are lovable, and she pulls apart her doll trying to discover where its “beauty” is located. Taking apart the doll to the core, she discovers only a “mere metal roundness.” The adults are outraged, but Claudia points out that they never asked her what she wanted for Christmas. She explains that her hatred of dolls turned into a hatred of little white girls and then into a false love of whiteness and cleanliness.

It is a Saturday afternoon, and Mrs. MacTeer is angry because Pecola has drunk three quarts of milk. The girls are avoiding Mrs. MacTeer and sitting bored on the steps when Pecola begins bleeding from between her legs. Frieda understands that Pecola is menstruating (though she calls it “ministratin’”) and attempts to attach a pad to Pecola’s dress. Meanwhile, Rosemary, who has been watching from the bushes, yells to Mrs. MacTeer that the girls are “playing nasty.” Mrs. MacTeer starts to whip Frieda, but then sees the pad, and the girls explain what has happened. Mrs. MacTeer is sorry and cleans up Pecola. That night in bed, Pecola asks Frieda how babies are made. Frieda says you have to get someone to love you. Pecola asks, “How do you get someone to love you?”

ANALYSIS – Why it is important and significant? 

This chapter introduces the various forms of powerlessness that Claudia faces and the challenges that she will encounter as she grows up. First of all, she experiences the universal powerlessness of being a child. Raised in an era when children are to be seen, not heard, she and her sister view adults as unpredictable forces that must be watched and handled carefully. Next, Claudia experiences the powerlessness of being black and poor in the 1940s. She and her family cling to the margins of society, with the dangerous threat of homelessness looming. Finally, Claudia experiences the powerlessness of being female in a world in which the position of women is precarious. Indeed, being a child, being black, and being a girl are conditions of powerlessness that reinforce one another so much that for Claudia they become impossible to separate.

Though Claudia is careful to point out that fear of poverty and homelessness was a more prevalent day-to-day worry in her community than fear of discrimination, racism does affect her life in subtle yet profound ways, especially in the sense that it distorts her beauty standards. Morrison most notably uses the cultural icon of Shirley Temple (a hugely popular child actress of the day) and the popular children’s dolls of the 1940s to illustrate mass culture’s influence on young black girls. When Claudia states that, unlike Frieda, she has not reached the point in her psychological “development” when her hatred of Shirley Temple and dolls will turn to love, the irony of the statement is clear. Claudia naïvely assumes that the beauty others see in the doll must inhere physically inside it, and so she takes apart the doll to search for its beauty. She has not yet learned that beauty is a matter of cultural norms and that the doll is beautiful not in and of itself but rather because the culture she lives in believes whiteness is superior.

Claudia’s hatred of white dolls extends to white girls, and Morrison uses this process as a starting point to study the complex love-hate relationship between blacks and whites. What horrifies Claudia most about her own treatment of white girls is the disinterested nature of her hatred. Claudia hates them for their whiteness, not for more defensible personal reasons. Ultimately, her shame of her own hatred hides itself in pretended love. By describing the sequence of hating whiteness but then coming to embrace it, Claudia diagnoses the black community’s worship of white images (as well as cleanliness and denial of the body’s desires) as a complicated kind of self-hatred. It is not simply that black people learn to believe that whiteness is beautiful because they are surrounded by white America’s advertisements and movies; Claudia suggests that black children start with a healthy hatred of the claims to white superiority but that their guilt at their own anger then transforms hatred into a false love to compensate for that hatred.

Unlike Claudia, Pecola does not undergo a process of first rejecting then accepting America’s white beauty standards. Pecola adores Shirley Temple and loves playing with dolls. Her excessive and expensive milk-drinking from the Shirley Temple is part of her desire to internalize the values of white culture—a symbolic moment that foreshadows her desire to possess blue eyes. While these desires illustrate that Pecola mentally and emotionally remains a child, her menstruation shows that she is experiencing a physical coming-of-age. Claudia and Frieda envy Pecola’s menstruation, but implicit in this scene is the threat that Pecola can now become pregnant, an adult reality that turns out to be quite troubling.

The pressures that Claudia faces as a girl becoming a woman are perhaps subtler than the pressures of race, but in some ways, more prevalent. There are continual references to the fate of women done wrong by men: Della Jones is thought to be senile in part because her husband left her; Pecola is homeless because her father has beaten his wife and burned down their home; Mrs. MacTeer sings blues songs about men leaving their women; and the onset of Pecola’s first period is cause for fear, confusion, and accusations of “nastiness” before becoming cause for muted celebration. The chapter ends with speculation about the connection between men, love, and babies. For Claudia, issues of racism, poverty, and standards of beauty are intimately connected to her inevitable entrance into womanhood. The same is true for Pecola, though her eventual initiation into the world of men, love, and babies is much too soon and much too violent.

 STUDENT RESPONSE

    FIND AT LEAST 2 QUOTES THAT YOU FOUND SIGNIFICANT THAT CONNECT TO THIS SUMMARY. Explain why it is significant to you.

Link: http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/bluesteye/section2.rhtml

20 responses to “Summary and Analysis to page 32

  1. ” A rustling noise in the buses startled me, and turning towards it, i saw a pair of fascinating eyes in a dough-white face ” (pg.30)
    “whippings wounded and insulted her ” (pg.31
    – these two quotes are significant in the summer given due to the fact on the word choice they used in describing rosemary watching them as ” fascinating eyes in a dough- white face and the second quote describes
    how Frieda felt.

  2. “My supply of ideas exhausted, I began to concentrate on the white spots on my fingernails.”

  3. “Her mother is angry but takes good care of Claudia, who does not understand that her mother is mad at the sickness, not her.”
    Its significant because Claudia thinks her mother is mad at her but she’s mad at her sickness and it’s making her throw-up.
    Being put out is different from being put outdoors.Being put outdoors is the end of something and you’ll wont have anywhere to go.

  4. “whippings wounded and insulted her ” (pg.31)
    “She was different from us now– grown-up-like”

  5. “she slept in the bed with us. Frieda on the outside because she is brave- it never occurs to her that if in her sleep her hand hangs over the edge of the bed “something” will crawl out from under it and bite her fingers off” pg 16. Even though Pecola is the oldest and has had her first period, Frieda is the most mature and brave because she doesn’t believe in monsters while Pecola and Claudia still are stuck in that child mindset that monsters exist. “I knew that the doll represented what they thought was my fondest wish.” This quote is significant because Pecola wishes she was white with blue eyes and since her parents brought her a doll like that it somewhat fulfills her wish in a way she doesn’t understand.

  6. “Her mother is angry but takes good care of Claudia, who does not understand that her mother is mad at the sickness, not her.”

    “Pecola asks, “How do you get someone to love you?”

    These two quotes are significant because they emphasize the lack of nurturing in the girls’ lives.

  7. “How do you do that? I mean, how do you get somebody to love you?” – this quote contains significance as not only does it shows the lack of nurture in the girl’s lives, but also contains a kind of innocence and lack of knowledge as well.
    “I do not know that she is not angry at me, but at my sickness” – this quote contains importance as well, as it also shows lack of knowledge and knowing from the girls, and that there’s a certain feeling of uselessness within this quote.

  8. ” Claudia explains that her hatred of dolls turned into a hatred of little white girls and then into a false love of whiteness and cleanliness.” (pg 20)

    “She is confused about why everyone else thinks such dolls are lovable, and she pulls apart her doll trying to discover where its “beauty” is located.” (pg 22)

    These quotes is significant to us because, Claudia expresses how white peoples beauty transferred to a gift that many young girls play. But Claudia expresses her hatred on those dolls that she try’s to find the garnishee of the a white doll.

  9. ” i destroy white baby dolls”
    This symbolisis the fact that Cludia sees that only the “most beautiful” dolls are white so she destroys them. when Cludia destroys the dolls it symbolisis her hatred toward white people and the fact she wont ever be “beautiful” due to the color of her eyes and skin.

    “How do you do that? I mean, how do you get somebody to love you?”
    This means that Pecola has never felt love or at least thinks she never has. On top of that her innocence is shown in the sence how before that she asked how you make a baby, you see that she doesnt know much not even how to love due to the things she gone through.

  10. 1) “Later I throw up, and my mother says, “What did you puke on the bed clothes for? Don’t you have sense enough to hold your head out the bed? Now, look what you did. You think I got time for nothing but washing up pukes?” (Page 11).

    This reveals the worse side of Claudia’s mother and her aggressive behavior toward her daughter, which isn’t acceptable. She doesn’t even care about her daughter’s health, but she cares the most about herself and cleanliness.

    2) “My mother’s anger humiliates me; her words chafe my cheeks, and I am crying.”

    She’s hurt by the words her mother used for her. This is also very essential because this relates to love, care and expectations. Just imagine how would you feel if your mother acted the same way with you?

  11. “I knew that the doll represented what they thought was my fondest wish.”
    The doll itself could have represented the idea of “white” people. Her desires is to become beautiful and in this exact moment she realizes that the doll is not beautiful alone in the eye of the beholder but rather society makes us believe that it is beautiful.

    It had occurred to Pecola some time ago that if her eyes…were different, that is to say, beautiful, she herself would be different.”
    She believes that her life might have been different if her outwards appearance was different. “How do you get someone to love you?” Her answer might be through beauty.

  12. “Here” they said “this is beautiful, and if you are on this day ‘worthy’ you may have it”
    -Her surrounding are classifying a white doll as beautiful, I believe is significant because it starts solidifying the definition of beauty with an ideal blue eyed, yellow haired girl, with the doll.

    “I destroyed white baby dolls”
    -symbolizes the hatred she has with whites, and it reflects her insecurities

  13. “I did not know why i destroyed those dolls.” 21
    It reveals that she wants to be like that doll but knew that she couldn’t be one and she has this weird feeling that made her break the dolls.

  14. “But Frieda was asleep. And I didn’t know.” (Pg. 32)
    This show how the girls don’t know how to get someone to love you or actually feel love or get love from somebody. Girls get no attention which shows the powerlessness of women.
    “Mama grabbed Frieda…on her legs” (Pg. 30)
    This shows how adults are in power of the children taking away Frieda her special moment. But this would sense shows how Pecola is now a young adult being quite troubling.

  15. “But I did know that nobody ever asked me what I wanted for Christmas.” pg. 21- This quote shows that Claudia had made up her mind (at a very young age, for that matter) about the things she could love and hate. The doll given to her was something that she knew she’d never learn to love or even continue to love, which causes her to hate the fact that no one asked her opinion on whether or not she wanted to receive it as a present.

    “I was interested only in humans my own age and size,and could not generate any enthusiasm at the prospect of being a mother.” pg. 20- In this moment Claudia is explaining to the reader that her mindset was in her present, and not in another girl’s future.This shows how little she knows about motherhood and girls’ growth, since motherhood could come at an unexpected time; as long as a girl has developed enough to begin her menstrual cycle,motherhood could come at any given time (even without her consent, and without her being considered a woman yet).

  16. “Her mother is angry but takes good care of Claudia, who does not understand that her mother is mad at the sickness, not her.”
    I think this is significant because it just portrays the lack of communication thay they have and I also think it conveys that she doesn’t feel loved from her mother because of the lack of emotions she demonstrates to Claudia.

  17. “is it true that i can have a baby now”(Morrison,32) This is very significant because it reveals how Pecola is a matured adult now since she can concieve a child but at the same time she’s still an innocent little child. She is asking and doesnt know yet.

    Pecula also asks “I mean, how do you get somebody to love you”(Morrison,32) This reveals that Pecula doesnt know much about love and we see her innocents. That question revolves around her life, wondering what love is, and realizing the reality of life.

  18. :That night, in bed, the three of us lay still. We were full of awe and respect for Pecola. Lying next to a real person who was really ministratin’ was somehow sacred. She was different from us now–grown-up-like. She, herself, felt the distance, but refused to lord it over us. (pg,32)”. this statement is significant because show that Pecola is on her puberty, and this make her different from Claudia and Frieda.

  19. “Is it true that I can have a baby now?” (pg. 32)
    This quote is significant because it shows the innocence in Pecola. Although she is the most matured of the girls she is still a child at heart. She isn’t aware of the changes in puberty she will go through neither the risks she will be at now since she can get pregnant.

    “… how do you get someone to love you?” (pg. 32)
    Once again this quote reveals the innocence of Pecola in the text. I think this quote is important because Pecola has not experienced love in her life, the love a child would normally get from their family and home has been taken away form her from her own father. I feel like this question would be something that taunts her as she tries to find the answer to it. I think that the same way that she loves Shirley Temple for her beauty as a white girl is why she wishes for blue eyes. Blue eyes are an attribute of white people who are adored and seen above others(colored people) and she is seeking that same admiration or love and thinks blue eyes will earn her that.

Leave a comment