In the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, the first character with a different interest in the novel would be Janie. At the beginning, she is revealed as a beautiful woman, who is dressed in overalls walking down the street. She is uncertain of the way she desires to live and who she is as a person. Her uncertainty is stated clearly, “Yeah, Pheoby, Tea Cake is gone. And dats de only reason you see me back here.”…
Responsible Of the Failed Marriage In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, main character Janie’s husband, Logan, is portrayed as a villain in their marriage to justify her leaving him for a new man. She establishes his bad behavior when she compares him to a Bear: “Logan with his shovel looked like a black bear doing some clumsy dance on his hind legs” (Hurston 31). Janie suggest Logan has animalistic characteristics, the comparison shows how Jamie fells about him.…
She wants Janie to get married to someone who can provide security and social status for her. She had married three men Logan Killicks, Jody Starks and Tea Cake. The relationship with the three men make Janie as tuff as she pretends to be.…
Although Logan Killicks has good intentions, he did not offer Janie the love and romance that she desired. Eventually, Logan begins oppressing Janie with work and labor; he starts treating her like a mule instead of a wife. He expects his wife to pick up his slack and burden. This is exemplified when Janie will not help Logan with the outdoor work and she explains to him that he has his place (the farm) and she has her place (the kitchen). In reply to this, Logan says, “You ain’t got no particular place. It’s wherever Ah need yuh” (31). Overall, the motif of the mule is used to describe the role Janie plays in her first marriage.…
As children we often cling to the storybook romance. The “happily ever after” cliché certainly appeals to the young romantic: however, the harsh reality of life may soon prove this to be foolishly sentimental. In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston explores these circumstances as she outlines Janie’s pursuit of happiness. Janie is described as a child of nature. The spiritual power of nature has a tremendous affect on the development of her character. Hurston uses this metaphor to symbolize Janie’s eagerness to find love. Though as a child she craved a conventional romance, nature guides her to her one true love. Before meeting the man of her dreams, Janie experiences many failed relationships that highlight the changes in her desires. Throughout the novel, Janie is influenced by natural forces that alter these desires in her relationships with Johnny Taylor, Logan Killicks, and Joe Starks.…
In Zora Neale Hurston's, Their Eyes Were Watching God, the concept of power is heavily emphasized throughout the novel. Although Joe “Jody” Starks, a man full of confidence and aspiration, became the mayor of the black town of Eatonville, he had an obsession for power and control that led to destruction.…
The most important person a girl looks up to and connects with is her mother. However, the girl may sometimes lack a mother figure, and may look to another: father, brother, sister, and if alive, grandmother. Janie Mae Crawford and Nanny share a complex relationship as her mother figure disappears and it is left to Nanny to nurture the protagonist, influencing many of her choices in the near future. Creator of character Nanny and Janie Mae Crawford, Zora Neale Hurston depicts the complexity of Nanny and Janie’s love in her novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God. Hurston effectively describes the difficulty of the mother-daughter relationship between Nanny and Janie. Janie and Nanny’s bond is compassionate,…
After reading Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, write a persuasive essay in which you rate Janie’s husbands by providing detailed and logical evidence as to whom would have been the best husband for the main character, Janie, in the long-run.…
There are many different allusions that define what something or someone is being compared to. An allusion is a reference to a well known person, event, object, or work. In the story, Their Eyes Are Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, the main character, Janie, found out what love is and the true meanings of it through many relationships. There were numerous amounts of allusions that related to other novels or bible verses. Janie was put through bad, been jealous of, and told what was best for her.…
The text is a short story by Zora Neale Hurston describing a little girl filled with joy and is constantly doing things that she wants without letting the color of her skin hold her back from living her childhood days to the fullest. The short story was first published December of 1924 in an issue of Opportunity. The reader would most likely be someone who reads issues published from Opportunity or someone who was looking for articles, poems, and short stories related to African-American studies and literary pieces related to the Harlem Renaissance. The author is a prizewinner for her short story Drenched in Light. Hurston made her debut in the Harlem Renaissance with that same prize winning short story. Hurston was raised in Eatonville, which…
You wake up beside your significant other as if it were any other day; then look them in the eyes and utter the words “Good morning!”. You feel overwhelmed with joy by the mere company of your spouse for in the morning after your wedding night and the dream of obtaining the level of companionship in which you yearned becomes a reality. In Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God the main character Janie pursues the quest of finding companionship in means of a husband. Zora Neale Hurston’s work includes many salient themes. The overlying theme of Their Eyes Were Watching God does not become evident until the last chapter of the novel. The perception of the ideal idea that love and relationships lead to happiness versus the idea that sadness comes from lonely and disconsolate independence that stems from socially scrutinized ideas…
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 plays a very important role in Hurston's Their Eyes were watching God. Janie spent her days…
During the post-civil war era, most “colored people did not know how to be free” (Houston Hartsfield Holloway). The abolishment of slavery was a major event that led blacks to desire fulfillment in life. Zora Neale Hurston demonstrates this through Janie’s life and the people she encounters. Each character provides a different outlook on life and their values are distinct from Janie’s. The novel questions what true happiness is via Janie’s influences and her quest to find love.…
Janie's entire life is one of a journey. She lives through a grandmother, three husbands, and innumerable friends. Throughout is all, she grows closer and closer to her ideals about love and how to live one's life. Zora Neale Hurston chooses to define Janie not by what is wrong in her life, but by what is good in it. Janie changes a lot from the beginning to the end of Their Eyes Were Watching God, but the imagery in her life always conjures positive ideas in the mind of the reader.…