Moreover, the main character Janie Crawford was married at a young age by her grandmother’s preference, in hopes of Janie not ending up like her mother. Taking on this marriage, young Janie did not know what to expect. Unwillingly, she married Mr. Logan Killicks who indeed did love and cherish her, but the love was not reciprocated. Janie in remorse, said, “Ah want things sweet wid mah marriage lak when you sit under a pear tree and think” . Consequently, this marriage puts a negative connotation on her because she…
A month after Nanny died Janie realized that being married to Logan was not going to bring about love. Zora Neal Hurston states “The familiar people and things had failed her so she hung over the gate and looked up the road towards way off. She knew now that marriage did not make love. Janie’s first dream was dead, so she became a woman”(25). Janie came to the realization that she does not want Logan, and Janie’s experience with being married to Logan had crushed her dream. Janie becoming a woman at the death of her dream means that womanhood is about hardship, and Janie had now experienced the hardship of womanhood. Janie Ultimately does not love Logan, and she now realizes that love cannot be learned with…
Janie’s first experience with marriage was not what she had intended it to be like at all. Her nanny, who was an extremely influential person in her life at one point, forced Janie to marry an elderly man, Logan Killicks, simply for his social…
The start of Janie’s journey begins with her living with her grandmother. Nanny, as she is referred to in the book, has a strange out view on the world around her and on Janey, and decides that she needs to married right away. Logan Killicks, a powerful, wealthy ambitious man, seemed to be the perfect candidate and Nanny settles for an arranged marriage. Janie was confused and thought that marriage required love, so she tries to “love” Logan. It turns out, the marriage was horrible. Logan turned out to be an arrogant snob with no romantic interest in Janie whatsoever.…
1. The parrot says “Allez vous-en! Allez vous-en! Sapristi! That’s all right!” (Chopin 5). It means “Get out! Get out! Damn it!” The words foreshadow something tragic to occur in the end of the novel. The parrot is also caged and also speaks a language in which only the mockingbird can understand. The parrot symbolizes Edna Pontillier who seems to only be understood by some but not all and seems to be beside herself because her husband doesn’t seem to notice her.…
1. The picture I got when I was introduced to “Blacky” is that I thought he had black skin colour and was an aboriginal due to his knick name being Blacky.…
Janie is a young adult and just now figuring out who she is and what kind of woman she is. She is forced to marry him by her Grandma simply because he was rich. But Janie didn’t want to be with a man just because he has money, she wants to be in love. After her experience under the pear tree, Janie is looking for a marriage filled with affection. "Ah wants things sweet wid mah marriage lak when you sit under a pear tree and think” (Hurston 24). She gives the relationship a chance, but there’s just nothing there. Life with Logan is dull and he treats her like she is his property. Like she is a farm animal and even puts her to work in the fields. Her marriage with Logan made her have many realizations. The experience with Logan made her realize that she didn’t want to be with someone just because he has money. She was also looking for an exciting man, one that would treat her with respect. She begins to look for this love for the remainder of the…
Love and marriage is one of the most prominent journeys that Janie goes experiences while achieving a subconscious, life-long pursuit of personal fulfillment. In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston sets the tone for the general theme of this story, love and marriage. Janie Mae Crawford marries three times. One arranged by Nanny, one she decides to leave, and the third seemed almost too good to be true, and it was. Tea Cake is the only man in which Janie found everlasting love. Janie desires true love for she has spent her life dreaming of it and waiting for it to come true.…
Before Janie’s grandmother died, she caught her kissing. From that day forward, she classified Janie as a young woman, and forced her to marry Logan Killocks. Janie had no interest in him. All she could pick out were the ugly features he had on the outside. She didn’t know anything about love, and wondered if she ever would. Logan didn’t treat her like a lady should be treated, so she ran off and married Joe. Being with Logan, Janie learned how it was like to be independent living away from home- her first step to adulthood! This was the first peek to widening Janie’s horizons.…
Love is a big theme in the book. Janie as said undergoes three marriages and what she’s looking for was all influenced when “She was stretched on her back beneath the pear tree” (p.10) and “she saw a dust bearing bee sink into the sanctum of a bloom; the thousand sister-calyxes arch to meet the love embrace and the ecstatic shiver of the tree from root to tiniest branch creaming in…
I initially noticed two types of views, one of Nanny and the other of Janie, a portrait of two women. For Nanny, relationships are a matter of pragmatism, or in other words common sense: Logan Killicks makes a good husband because he is well-off, honest, and hard-working. In a harsh world, he offers shelter and physical security. It makes sense that a former slave like Nanny would have such a perspective. Her life has been one of poverty and hardship, with any hope of material advancement eliminated by the color of her skin. Logan Killicks, being a successful farmer who owns his own land, represents an ideal that Nanny could only dream of when she was Janie’s age. Janie, on the other hand is searching for a deeper kind of fulfillment, one that offers both physical passion and emotional…
Being that Janie married three times, it is reasonable that these relationships help make her the person she is. Her first husband, Logan Killicks, was an arranged marriage set up by her grandma. She hoped to find real love after marriage with Mr. Killicks. Her next marriage was to Joe Starks. Unfortunately, he only married her for the image not for love. Her last marriage was to a man that goes by the name of Tea Cake. Janie fell in love with him and realized that he was all she wanted. In the end she learned from each one of her marriages and knows now who she really…
Janie’s three marriages helped her find herself and God. Janie spent most her life living it the way her grandmother would want her to, and loving the way her grandmother wanted her to. Janie’s grandmother believed love was all about money, property and a status; she pretty much wanted Janie to be with a black man, who had everything a white man had to offer, she wanted Janie to have the best. Janie didn’t like her grandmother ideas of life and love but did it for her in her first marriage, than her second went into it because she knew her grandmother would approve, but on the third one it all changed. Janie finally lived and loved her own way with Tea Cake and learned from Logan Killicks and Jody Starks.…
Janie first did not understand what love meant to her, but at the age of 16 she came to know it because “That was before the golden dust of Pollen had beglamored his rags and her eyes” (Hurston 12). Hurston who compares the nature theme to natural born love shows readers that Janie fell in love with Johnny Taylor due to inexperience she had with identifying love. However, her unknown love does not stop there as her grandmother, who sees her approaching womanhood, persuades her to marry a man named Logan Killicks as an attempt to stop Janie from making the choice of just loving, but to obtain a sustainable future (Hurston 13). Janie discovers that her meaning of love differs from that of her grandmother and elderly because her grandmother who came from the slave period wanted Janie to achieve a marriage, which can provide for Janie’s needs in material value. On the other hand, Janie soon begins searching for her ideals of love by herself, as she knew “Even if Joe was not there waiting for her, the change was bound to do her good” (Hurston 32). Janie was through with the life her grandmother setup for her and instead wished to search for love even if she went in with no knowledge or experience of it. She did not care if Joe was there or not because her choice to leave the marriage was her own decision and would lead to her finding her independence. However, Joe was present and Janie allowed him to charm her back to her search for love. After the marriage with, was Janie’s last cold toe dip in searching for love as she accepts Tea Cake more hesitantly saying, “oh, Tea Cake, don’t make no false pretense wid me” (Hurston 109). A more experienced Janie learned not to rush in to love after finding out love does not work, as you want it…
Janie’s first marriage is to Logan Killicks. Logan Killicks is an older man, and a farmer. He is very hardheaded and unromantic towards Janie. When Janie moves in with Logan, she is clearly miserable. “Logan Killicks disgusts Janie sexually, but has a pedestal for her to stand on. To be precise, sixty acres of land and a nice house” (Cantarow 318). Janie marries Logan because she feels as if she has no choice. “Her grandmother (Nanny) directs Janie’s entrance into adulthood. Born into slavery, the older woman hopes to find protection and materialistic comforts for Janie in a marriage to the property-owning Logan Killicks.” (Kaplan 1395). By Janie being forced to marry, it is already shown that she has no freedom of her own. “Although she hopes loves will follow marriage, Janie is soon disappointed, for Logan grows more…