“Their Eyes Were Watching God” by Zora Hurston‚ is about a woman named Janie who searched for love and went to different struggles and still came on top. I believe this story is a feminist novel. First of all‚ Feminism in my own words is a movement for women to be equal to men. Keep in mind that the setting of the story takes place in the 19th century. Women were in a lower class but most importantly were objectified. Janie’s Grandmother had a mentality that was different from Janie’s. With me coming
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Nature is something that is naturally beautiful. When a writer is able to use nature as metaphor various times throughout a book‚ it really creates a pleasant understanding of what the writer is trying to say. In Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ there are many metaphors about nature to the protagonist’s life. The leading protagonist in this book is Janie Crawford. The book covers most of Janie’s adulthood and perfectly describes it using nature as a metaphor. Hurston made Janie’s
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Every person has ideas and opinions‚ and to communicate these thoughts‚ he uses his voice. Sometimes a person’s voice is encouraged and respected‚ but other times his voice is restricted or silenced. In Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ Zora Neale Hurston demonstrates that different factors can affect a person’s decision to use his voice by depicting the relationships Janie Crawford experiences. Janie’s caretaker as she grows up is Nanny‚ her grandmother who believes she knows what is best for Janie
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In Hurston’s literary work‚ Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ she employs the use of southern dialect in her characters dialogue. Hurston uses the dialect to convey the personality of her characters while adding to the feeling of a story that is being told. The dialect helps the reader feel like the novel has come to life before them and they mentally attribute different surrounding backgrounds to Hurston’s characters‚ while taking in the meanings and significance behind Janie’s life story of love and
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Women are the mules of the world. In the book Their Eyes Were Watching God Zora Neale Hurston uses the metaphor of the mule and women to convey the idea of the superiority of men and inferiority of women and mules. In the metaphor of mules and women Hurston tries to send a message to the reader that women are the mule of the world. Hurston best does this through her descriptions of the mules and their role in the world comparing them to the character Janie in relation to her marriages. Hurston writes
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Their Eyes Were Watching God Topic Tracking: Voice Description of Voice|Quote| Chapter 2Voice 1: Janie’s grandmother was born during slavery. Black people‚ and especially women‚ could not voice their opinions. Nanny always wanted to make a great speech‚ but no one would listen. She wants Janie to be able to speak and have people listen.|“And‚ Janie‚ maybe it wasn’t much‚ but Ah done de best Ah kin for you. Ah raked and scraped and bought dis lil piece uh land so you wouldn’t have to stay in de
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Their eyes were watching god is a story of a girl named Janie. The story starts with Janie coming to her hometown in a very bad condition. Her hair is messed up‚ her clothes are torn and as soon as she reaches near by her house‚ everyone in her neighborhood starts to look at her and make nosy comments about her. Men talk about how her buttocks and breasts look. Women talk about how excited she was to leave the town and how she has ended up coming back in the town. They also comment about a man and
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act of haughty disdain. They’re Eyes Were Watching God takes place just after the civil war during a patriarchal and misogynistic time period; this explains why Joe feels that he can
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Women in the Eyes of Society For centuries women have been considered delicate and have been looked down upon by men. In books and movies women are treated like children and work animals. In the book Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston‚ and in the movie The Color Purple directed by Steven Spielberg‚ originally written by Alice Walker‚ women are not treated like equals but as an inferior being. These stories present stereotypical women that stay at home and are mindless compared to
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Summary: 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
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