|7 |“No matter what Jody did, she said nothing. She had learned |It has been 20 years since she has been married to Joe Starks and |Through the marriage of Joe Starks, brings the conflict of man|…
In Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, there is a continuous comparison between Janie and mules. Throughout Janie’s life, she has been viewed as a domesticated animal and treated like one. The author uses a motif of a mule to show the roles that Janie played in each of her relationships and how despite her struggles, she is eventually able to break free of her mule status.…
Zora Neale Hurston was an anthropologist and novelist during the Harlem Renaissance. Growing up in the small town of Eatonville, Florida, she experienced what it was like to live in an all African American township. Despite early struggles in high school, she managed to graduate Barnard College in 1928. Her most influential work was the novel she wrote in 1937, “Their Eyes Were Watching God” (Springboard, 369). In spite of her writing this novel during a specific era, Hurston held views quite different from other writers during the Renaissance. Although it did extend beyond Harlem Renaissance themes, parts of her story were based off the thoughts and ideas of the time period.…
All throughout Their Eyes were Watching God, the main character, Janie, seems to swoon over her third husband Tea Cake. She’s obsessed with the fact that he makes her feel worthy or even smart unlike her other husbands, Joe and Logan. He actually takes the time to teach her how to play checkers, something she was never allowed to do. Vergible “Tea Cake” Woods also makes Janie young and spontaneous. Their adventure filled relationship make her glow inside. To the sudden night fishing trip, to romantic picnics, even to dancing until her feet hurt at Jacksonville clubs.They way he cuddled up to her scratching her head and petting her hair make her feel beautiful and loved deeply. All these factors may all make Tea Cake seem like a “good” man, but Janie really fails to narrate or even look into his cons, which happen to big ones overcasting his pleasant traits. He’s stolen her money without her permission, caught practically cheating on Janie with another…
There are two types of relationships in life, symbiotic and non-symbiotic. Happiness usually comes from symbiotic relationships and the latter comes from non-symbiotic ones. Zora Neale Hurston explores these ideas in her 1937 novel, There Eyes Were Watching God. The novel explores a story of a fair-skinned African American woman, Janie Crawford, and her evolving selfhood, confidence and independence through three marriages in which she experiences trials and finds her purpose. More complex than just a love story, Hurston shows us the story of a woman who refused to live in sorrow and persevered to find her maturity with life…
In the book Their Eyes Were Watching God There are many themes. The one that stood out the most was Janie’s silence. Once Janie discovers her ability to define herself by her speech and interactions with others, she learns that silence can be used as a power. She then learns how to control her silence. The author places great emphasis on the control of language as the source of identity and power. Janie uses silence as both a tool of oppression and power during her marriages.…
In Zora Neale Hurston’s, Their Eyes Were Watching God, the story illustrates a biracial African American woman, Janie, who is returning to her home in Eatonville. The novel is told in the form of a flashback and gives an account of her early teenage years all the way through her mature adulthood when she returns to her home. During her journey through life Janie is confronted with many different conflicts. She fights both internal and external conflicts, such as her search for true love, gender roles, and racism. When Janie is a young girl she sits under a pear tree which is where she finds her ideal image of love and marriage. Janie undergoes three different marriages with each having their own conflicts that in the end would be beneficial…
“Look deep into nature,and then you will understand everything better.”Albert Einstein.”Beast of the Southern Wild” was a film that was directed by Benh Zeitlin and was released by June 27,2012. “Their Eyes Were Watching God” was a novel that was written by Zora Hurston and was published in September 18,1937.The film and the novel had some similarities such as having connection to nature,mothers relationship,and what happened in the big storm.…
Many people don’t own a pug, but let me tell you it is fun. So I consider you are getting a pug if you don’t already own one. There so loving and kind. There background is pretty cool as well. So let me give the reader some hints to finding if the pug is right for you. So let’s get started.…
Being in high school you meet a lot of people, some you like, some you do not like, some enjoyable, and then some like Joe Starks from the book “Their Eyes Were Watching God”, by Hora Neale Hurtson. Joe Starks is the husband of the main character Janie, they meet while Janie is married to Logan Killicks. Janie runs off with Joe because he promises her a better life. For the first seven years, their marriage is great! Joe turns bitter as the years go on. Joe is jealous, confident, and cold hearted, Joe is like this because he never found true love and depended on his money for happiness, this paper seeks to evaluate the traits of Joe Starks.…
In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, the hardships of being a young black woman in the 1930’s are conveyed through the experiences of Janie Crawford and her self-growth throughout several relationships in her life. Hurston contributes to the theme “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” by exhibiting how the motifs of power, judgment and sexism morphed Janie into becoming a resilient female character that challenged the societal norms set for her. This theme was also shown within the different towns that Janie lived in during the story and how those cultural settings projected their beliefs about dominance and power on Janie, and how Janie’s character grew immensely from the judgements she overcame in her lifetime.…
My piano teacher once told me to first accept myself for who I am in order for others to accept me. If I did not first accept myself, why should others accept me? In Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, Janie strives to find happiness by living her life the way others want her to live it, but she misses the most important factor, so she is never truly happy. Janie feels empty, and constantly strives to find a way to fill that void. Towards the end of the novel, however, Janie realizes the key to her happiness is being able to make her own decisions based on her values. In order to find true happiness, one has to first live life without being influenced or controlled by others..…
Hurston uses many symbols and metaphors in Their Eyes Were Watching God to develop Janie’s story. Symbols stand for, represent, or suggest another thing. A metaphor, however, is a figure of speech containing an implied comparison, in which a word or phrase ordinarily and primarily used for one thing is applied to another.…
“‘Mules and other brutes had occupied their [Black] skins. But now, the sun and the [White] bossman were gone, so the skins felt powerful and human’” (186). Race, education, and social class are very closely intertwined in Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston. Social class, defined as a division of society based on social and economic status, can be related to the loss of humanity seen in the African Americans. The White men and women, as seen in the courtroom scene, seem to follow the “high” dialogue, meanwhile the Black men and women are all clumped together, speaking in “eye-dialect”. Underneath Hurston’s “high” and “low” dialogue, the reader can detect a difference in the life cycles—including jobs, relationships, and dreams—of…
We, as humans, often make negative judgments when anger and our insecurities are triggered in a situation. A judgment is an opinion formed after some deliberation or consideration of someone or something. In Their Eyes Were Watching God, written by Zora Neale Hurston, the judgments made by the characters in the story are frequently based on their anger and insecurities. Many examples of judgment are spread throughout the book. In the early fifties through the late seventies, people appear to be racially judgmental when they are insecure and angered by the change in their environment. Judgments seem to be all around us and are a way to express feelings.…