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最蓝的眼睛英语在线阅读

发布时间: 2021-02-12 22:28:31

1. 跪求最蓝的眼睛英文版

你好!
最蓝的眼睛
The bluest eye

2. 《最蓝的眼睛》中主人公的分析

《最蓝的眼睛》是一部悲伤的悲剧小说,该小说叙述了主人公皮科拉·布里德洛瓦所受到的虐待和遭遇。皮科拉是一个年轻的美国女孩子,她的母亲早就知道她的这个非常黑的女儿将来长大后不会是一个吸引人的女孩。小说的故事发生的时间是1940年,小说的第一人称是克劳蒂亚·麦克蒂尔,她比皮科拉小两岁,是皮科拉惟一的朋友。在一个白人占统治地位的时代,作为黑人的皮科拉开始相信:如果自己的皮肤是白色的,那么她的生活就会美好得多,而且她还把蓝色的眼睛视为是一个白人的象征。她眼看着自己的父亲乔利·布里德洛瓦随着梦想的破碎而逐渐变成了一个暴徒,而且作为一个非裔美国人,父亲也不断地因为其出身而他遭受挫折和羞辱;她的母亲波林则进入了一家清洁而整齐的白人家庭做女仆。
在一个春天的下午,当皮科拉的父亲喝完酒回家后,就强暴了皮科拉,那时,家中只有她和她父亲两人。当父亲再次强暴皮科拉之后,她怀孕了。由于身心遭受伤害,皮科拉更加渴望逃避现实,于是她拜访了骗子牧师迈卡·伊莱休·惠特科姆——迈卡在有名的索阿菲德教堂担任牧师,皮科拉请求迈卡给她一双蓝色的眼睛。为了钱,迈卡声称自己可以帮助皮科拉实现她的理想,但条件是,皮科拉必须首先为他执行一个任务。迈卡早就想除掉一只生病的老狗,于是,他给皮科拉一块有毒的肉,让皮科拉拿这块肉去喂那只老狗,并欺骗皮科拉说,只有这样她才实现自己的愿望。当皮科拉眼看着那只老狗吃了有毒的肉之后在地上痛苦地挣扎并最终死去后,她吓坏了。
这次的惊吓,再加上前面的被强暴事件,这一切地遭遇使得皮科拉变疯了、使得她完全丧失了与现实的接触。皮科拉认为,她的确已经拥有了一双蓝色的眼睛,而且还幻想自己拥有一个亲密的朋友,这个朋友总是不离自己左右,并时分珍视自己,因为自己拥有世界上最蓝的眼睛。

3. 一段英语阅读的翻译!恳请各位英语超赞的亲帮我翻译一下! 快快快~

不要认为一起吃饭是个有趣的社交活动。的确,很多情况下我们一些有趣的社交活动版都是围绕着美食,比如权跟朋友一起吃饭聊天。事实上,你跟朋友也有很多其他的社交活动。比如一起去踢球或者打球,这期间你也可以吃点小吃,但是关键并不在吃东西。所以说健康生活不再是个难题。

好别扭,文章的主题没弄懂。。要不就是小学生写的。

4. 哪里有小说《The Bluest Eye》(《最蓝的眼睛》)的英文下载

http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&q=The+Bluest+Eye+online&btnG=Search&meta=

5. 最蓝的眼睛英语论文怎么写

the bluest eyes

6. 急需关于《最蓝的眼睛》(the bluest eye)的英文评论

这是节选:其他见http://www.luminarium.org/contemporary/tonimorrison/bluest.htm

The Bluest Eye': notes on history, community, and black female subjectivity

by Jane Kuenz

In Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye, the Breedloves' storefront apartment is graced overhead by the home of three magnificent whores, each a tribute to Morrison's confidence in the efficacy of the obvious. The novel's unhappy convergence of history, naming and bodies--delineated so subtly and variously elsewhere--is, in these three, signified most simply and most crudely by their bodies and their names: Poland, China, the Maginot Line. With these characters, Morrison literalizes the novel's overall conflation of black female bodies as the sites of fascist invasions of one kind or another, as the terrain on which is mapped the encroachment and colonization of African-American experiences, particularly those of its women, by a seemingly hegemonic white culture. The Bluest Eye as a whole documents this invasion--and its concomitant erasure of specific local bodies, histories, and cultural proctions--in terms of sexuality as it intersects with commodity culture. Furthermore, this mass culture and, more generally, the commodity capitalism that gave rise to it, is in large part responsible--through its capacity to efface history--for the "disinterestedness" that Morrison condemns throughout the novel. Beyond exempting this, Morrison's project is to rewrite the specific bodies and histories of the black Americans whose positive images and stories have been eradicated by commodity culture. She does this formally by shifting the novel's perspective and point of view, a narrative tactic that enables her, in the process, to represent black female subjectivity as a layered, shifting and complex reality.

The disallowance of the specific cultures and histories of African-Americans and black women especially is figured in The Bluest Eye primarily as a consequence of or sideline to the more general annihilation of popular forms and images by an ever more all-pervasive and insidious mass culture instry. This instry increasingly disallows the representation of any image not premised on consumption or the proction of normative values concive to it. These values are often rigidly tied to gender and are race-specific to the extent that racial and ethnic differences are not allowed to be represented. One lesson from history, as Susan Willis reiterates, is that "in mass culture many of the social contradictions of capitalism appear to us as if those very contradictions had been resolved" ("I Shop" 183). Among these contradictions we might include those antagonisms continuing in spite of capitalism's benevolent influence, along the axes of economic privilege and racial difference. According to Willis, it is because "all the models [in mass cultural representation] are white"--either in fact or by virtue of their status as "replicants ... devoid of cultural integrity"--that the differences in race or ethnicity (and class, we might add) and the continued problems for which these differences are a convenient excuse appear to be erased or made equal "at the level of consumption" ("I Shop" 184). In other words, economic, racial and ethnic difference is erased and replaced by a purportedly equal ability to consume, even though what is consumed are more or less competing versions of the same white image.

There is evidence of the presence and influence of this process of erasure and replacement throughout The Bluest Eye. For example, the grade school reader that prefaces the text was (and in many places still is) a ubiquitous, mass-proced presence in schools across the country. Its widespread use made learning the pleasures of Dick and Jane's commodified life dangerously synonymous with learning itself. Its placement first in the novel makes it the pretext for what is presented after: As the seeming given of contemporary life, it stands as the only visible model for happiness and thus implicitly accuses those whose lives do not match up. In 1941, and no less so today, this would include a lot of people. Even so, white lower-class children can at least more easily imagine themselves posited within the story's realm of possibility. For black children this possibility might require a double reversal or negation: Where the poor white child is encouraged to forget the particulars of her present life and look forward to a future of prosperity--the result, no doubt, of forty years in Lorain's steel mills--a black child like Pecola must, in addition, see herself, in a process repeated throughout The Bluest Eye, in (or as) the body of a white little girl. In other words, she must not see herself at all. The effort required to do this and the damaging results of it are illustrated typographically in the repetition of the Dick-and-Jane story first without punctuation or capitalization, and then without punctuation, capitalization, or spacing.

7. 急需《最蓝的眼睛》(the bluest eye)的英文原著

http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/bluesteye/

以上是书评,当时没看仔细,不好意思。下面网站有下载:
http://topk.cn/

需要注册一下,搜索书名,然回后回复那个帖子才答行。

8. 请问哪里有《最蓝的眼睛》(英文版)

这些地址都有英文版的The Bluest Eye
http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/bluesteye/
http://www.randomhouse.com/features/morrison/excerpt.html
http://www.en8848.com.cn/Soft/Class19/Class22/2006-11-08/1861.html
http://www.oprah.com/obc/pastbooks/toni_morrison/obc_pb_20000427.jhtml

9. 谁有《最蓝的眼睛》英语原著pdf 版,最好有封面。或者把原著封面和背面的照片。谢谢

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