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    Realism in Sweat

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    Lyndee Hudson Sister T. Willburn English 335 7 June 2013 Realism in Zora Neale Hurston’s “Sweat” In Zora Neale Hurston’s short story “Sweat” the author uses rhythm and repetition to shape her theme of survival and empowerment by simulating labored and conscious footsteps‚ rhythmic pounding of sledge hammers along a chain gang‚ and the loud beats of an anxious and overworked heart. This rhythm and repetition builds tension as Delia‚ the protagonist‚ finds within herself the strength necessary

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    Vernacular Dialect in Their Eyes Were Watching God In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neal Hurston‚ the spoken words of the characters are often simple and rough. Hurston uses vernacular dialect in order to preserve the culture of southern blacks in the early twentieth century. The author’s use of dialect in the novel demonstrates the difference between Janie’s relationship with Jody and Janie’s relationship with Tea Cake. When Janie is married to Jody‚ few conversations between

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    different water fountain‚ or where they had to give up their own seat on a bus for a white person. Since these days‚ many people have protested and fought for equality such as Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. In Brent Staples “Just Walk on By‚” and Zora Neale Hurston’s “How it Feels to be Colored Me‚” both show‚ through the use of rhetorical devices‚ how race has affected them personally and how they dealt with it in their own way‚ revealing the unnecessary hate and discrimination in our society.

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    Janie’s Path to Finding Her Voice Summary: Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Hurston narrates the story of the confident Caucasian and African American Janie Crawford and her -to say the least- eventful life. The book begins with Janie arriving back at her home in Eatonville‚ Florida; she quickly becomes the talk of town with neighbors gossiping and speculating incessantly about the girl’s past. In the midst of all‚ Phoeby Watson stands up for her‚ appearing as her only friend. Phoeby pays Janie

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    Finding Yourself To be different is to be unique and to stand by your own judgment. Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ by Zora Hurston‚ is a coming of age novel with a heartwarming romance in the 1930s by showing the integrity of the narrator‚ Janie Crawford whom tells her viewpoint of what it took to find love‚ by first finding herself. Alike‚ from Ralph Waldo Emerson’s excerpt Self-Reliance and Henry David Thoreau’s essay Civil Disobedience‚ these transcendentalist thinkers also believed individuals

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    she learns valuable lessons‚ has progressively better relationships‚ and realizes how a person is to live his or her life. In Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ by Zora Neale Hurston‚ Janie’s marriages to Logan Killicks‚ Jody Starks‚ and Tea Cake seem like the most crucial elements in her development as a woman. Throughout the story Hurston uses different men to portray the continuum that men fall into in their society. Janie’s marriage to Logan Killicks seems like the first stage in her development

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    (15 points) 2. Compare and contrast what Richard Wright and Zora Neale Hurston learn in their autobiographical pieces. Answer: Richard Wright and Zora Neale learn many alternative things in their autobiographical items. Wright wrote his story once he was nineteen‚ and he grew abreast of a plantation‚ therefore it will be inferred that he learned the worth of cash and therefore the influence of race on personal opinion. Zora Neale grew up in Sunshine State‚ one in every of the primary African-American

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    Burning” and Zora Neala Hurston’s “Sweat” are both short stories talking about family relationships. “’Barn Burning’ is about a spiritual quest for the father”. (Billingslea). However “Sweat” questions what marriage brings to women? William Faulkner describes the young boy Sarty’s inner battle through the abundant description of his back and forth psychological change. However‚ Zora Neala Hurston uses ample conversation to show Delia’s rebellion. Both the two authors Faulkner and Hurston describe the

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    history from the government to their close relatives‚ they have made a difference for 20th century women and beyond. In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ Hurston utilizes characterization effectively develops the theme of identity. Zora Neale Hurston was born in Eatonville‚ Florida on January 7‚ 1903‚ to reverend John and Lucy Hurston. When Zora was 9 years old her mother died and her father soon remarried; after‚ her relationship

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    Reliance

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    Be Colored Me Analysis Essay 4) How do you respond to the conception of race which Hurston ends her essay? Does it agree with how you understand race? As we know‚ much of the American culture is based upon slavery‚ and how African Americans as well as other individuals with a dark complexion have been persecuted and segregated throughout American history until the 1960’s. Fortunately‚ Zora Neale Hurston‚ the author of the passage “How It Feels to Be Colored Me‚” explains how she lived through

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