In chapter five of Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston tells the readers about Jody and Janie arrive in Eatonville, Florida to find that it consists of little more than a dozen shacks. Jody introduces himself to two men, Lee Coker and Amos Hicks, and asks to see the mayor; the men reply that there is none. After buying land, Jody announces his plans to build a store and a post office and calls a town meeting. Jody hires Coker and Hicks to build his new shop and quickly becomes mayor after recruiting new residents and rebuilding the town.While this was happening, Janie is told to not speak in front of crowds and feels alone because of her husband.…
The power of speech plays an important part in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God. Each character starts off with their own unique voice. The strength and control of a caharacers’ voice changes throughout the novel determining their place in society and relationship with others.…
Richard Wright believed that Hurston failed to convey any type of message, thought or theme. He believed her original audience and motive for writing the book was to entertain the white readers with a story that would make them laugh. All of Wright’s reflections are inaccurate, because the title of the book itself hints at a religious theme. The title, “Their Eyes Were Watching God” means the creation of a new form of humanity, that is no longer based on the master and slave society.…
The female view in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes were Watching God suggests a changing sense of attitudes in American culture in many ways. Firstly, the story is told in third-person point of view from Janie, the main character’s, perspective through her narration to her friend Phoeby. She’s not only a woman, but African-American. The story is about Janie’s trials and tribulations in her life, including her three marriages. The novel is a celebration of African-American characters and is formulated around its female point of view. It showed a change in the attitude in American culture because of the way it portrays its characters. Hurston gives context as to why the major characters do what they do. Janie is searching for both love yet independence, Logan was looking for a wife, Joe wanted to be powerful, and Tea Cake’s need to travel. All in all, these characters help project Janie’s growth into finding herself by the end of the novel. It shows a change of attitude because of how all these characters help Janie develop as a character. It shows a in-depth story of a woman who faces many trying times but overcomes them in the…
Hurston uses dialect in her novels to enable the user to have a deeper insight into the culture in which the novels are set. Dialects are used to preserve oral traditions of a particular group. She uses dialect to preserve the African-American oral traditions to be passed on to the reader. The use of dialect makes the characters more interesting, especially to the African-American society. It is obvious that the book was meant for a black audience who read using the southern dialect among blacks to spice up the story.…
2. Metaphors are an effective way in creating depth and adding creativity within stories. In the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Neale Hurston used motifs of the horizon numerous times to illustrate a symbol of Janie’s crusade to find contentment. The horizon was the strongest metaphor presented in the novel, for it had many effects. Janie often stared toward the horizon in search of hope and justification. Her horizon changed continuously as she set out for something bigger. One example was when Janie referred to the horizon while she was discussing her life with Phoebe. She stated, “Ah done been tuh de horizon and back and now Ah kin…
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston is chock-full of metaphors. Through metaphors, the author can create a link between different parts of the book, pointing out changes over time that the characters experience. These metaphors showcase the character development and refining of personality which the characters, especially Janie, go through in this book. Although she must suffer hardships in life to reach it, Janie ultimately attains happiness and good character, as is evident in the signature nature-focused Romantic metaphors [HUH?!?Try rewording it] that Hurston uses. [Try to make the thesis in one sentence with the “why” portion after a semicolon]…
As t he sun begins to set, and the evening nears closer and closer, you can hear the screeching of dining room chairs making their way onto the front porch. The boiling pot of secrets just about to spill over from the loose lips of the porch’s gazers, which are salivating over the thought of discussing the news of the town; that of which spread like quick fire . Not stationary to their porches the gazers are like investigate reporters, just waiting, to find a new story to talk about. In Zora Neale Hurston’s novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God , the importance of group discussion and bond forming bonds between women was essential to make it through the struggles and battles that the women faced. The concept of a “Strong Black Woman” was proven to be true in , but it also proves that even being a strong black woman, having another woman to talk to is a powerful force all in itself.…
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.…
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.…
In Zhora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, Joe and Janie actually do love each other, they just do not “speak” the same love language. Joe’s most dominant love language is acts of service, which means he shows love by going out of their way for someone and likes when someone does something for them without them asking them to. He shows this kind of love when he takes Janie away from Logan and on the train he “bought her the best things the butcher had, like apples and a glass lantern full of candies” (Hurston 34). Janie does not realize that Joe was showing his love to her because her most dominant love language is different than Joe’s. Janie’s most dominant love language is words of affirmation, which means she shows love through…
A lot of the content in Their Eyes is taken from Zora's own life. Hurston's familiarity of southern life allows her to accurately depict the unique dialect that makes Their Eyes Were Watching God so special. Throughout the novel, she uses an interesting narrative structure. Almost as if she split the presentation of the novel right down the middle, between high literary narrations using proper, refined speech and the southern drawl, the improper grammar and misspellings. Initial…
Zora Neale Hurston Portrays multiple sublime themes and ideas in her classic 1937 novel. Janie Crawford, the main character, desires love throughout her life in hopes to find the companion of her life to match the familiar ideal that love and successful relationships lead to true happiness. Through her relationships with Vergible “Tea Cake” Woods and Joe Starks she finally discovers a contradicting revelation that she feels genuinely satisfied alone. The accounts of these three characters help implement the theme throughout the…
First, Hurston's diction allows the reader to recognize that she grew up in a country home. Her slow and eloquent tone describing "the fleshy, white, fragrant blooms" and the "big barn, [with] a stretch of ground well covered with Bermuda grass" reveals the atmosphere in which she was raised. Moreover, when observing the conversations she had with others, phrases such as "jump at de sun," "no-count Negroes," and "folks up north" further indicate her Southern origins. Alongside this, Hurston's avoidance of contractions in her work provides…
Racism is one of the main issues addressed in this novel as well. People were…