While growing up in the extremely racially divided south, she managed to graduate as the valedictorian of her high school class. She later grew up and became a huge civil rights activist and a phenomenal writer.
Zora Neale Hurston wrote a book called “Their Eyes Were Watching God”; it included a variety of different postcolonial aspects. This novel didn’t discuss any of the men’s problems; rather it specifically focused on the women’s desire to be free and genuinely happy within. The main character Janie is mixed, and initially is seemingly a little confused about her ethnicity, but eventually she embraces and identifies as …show more content…
Throughout the novel she has trouble with self-perception. Which relates to post colonialism since most of this criticism emphasizes instability of identity. At an early age Janie reluctantly marries an elderly man to please her grandmother and is now forced to play the role of a wife to a man that could easily have been