Comparison and Contrast of The Awakening by Kate Chopin and Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston Though it is rare to find literary works that empower women while still maintaining a scholarly tone‚ it is interesting that both The Awakening by Kate Chopin and Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston achieve this without coming across as confrontational to the reader or seeming like they are trying to indoctrinate the reader into a new set of beliefs. While they have their differences
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II Chapter 2.1 Their Eyes Were Watching God In the second chapter‚ the analysis of the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God will be provided. At the very beginning‚ it is worth mentioning some crucial facts related to this novel. Published in 1937‚ the novel is nowadays considered canonical reading both for African American literature as well as for women’s literature. Their Eyes Were Watching God consists of four parts. Each part encapsulates a different period in the main character’s life. The
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English Argumentative essay The novel‚ “Their Eyes Were Watching God”‚ focuses on a woman named Janie Crawford and her adventure for love and her struggle for independence. Since both of Janie’s parents were not in her life‚ she is forced to live with her grandmother. One day‚ Janie meets a boy and kisses him; this single action dictates where the rest of her life
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In her article “Tuh de Horzion and Back: The Female Quest in Their Eyes Were Watching God”‚ Missy Dehn Kubitschek argues against her fellow critics’ common misconception of Janie as “a passive prize” (109)‚ in favor of‚ recognizing the “the independence and strength” (109) within her. Kubitschek showcases the independence and strength of Janie through outlining her heroine’s quest throughout‚ Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ according to the five qualifications‚ “answering the call to adventure‚ crossing
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As the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God comes to a close Zora Hurston uses a lot of figurative language. On page 192 Hurston uses personification to emphasize her point. She says‚ "There was a finished silence" which makes the reader pause even before they reach the end of the sentence. The reader could either interpret the silence as being over‚ or they could see it as being a complete and undisturbed silence that was coming about. Directly after that the readers questions are answered. By saying
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Chapter 9 Response In the passage from chapter 9 from the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston‚ the author uses diction‚ figurative language‚ and selection of detail to express Janie’s change to a self-promoting attitude compared to Nanny’s materialistic and dependant way of living life. Jody’s funeral was a great event that everyone from doctors to farm people attended. Janie’s sadness did not show‚ if she had any at all‚ but she could not show the world that she was not affected
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“New Negro Movement”‚ affectionately referred to as the Harlem Renaissance. Hurston’s diverse literary portfolio includes: Jonah’s Gourd Vine‚ Mules and Men‚ Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ and Seraph on the Swanee. Of herself‚ Hurston notes: “I am not tragically colored. There is no great sorrow dammed up in my soul‚ nor lurking behind my eyes... I feel most colored when I am thrown against a sharp white background” (Colored 1031). Hurston is a woman whose literary legacy is defined by the idea that a
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In “Finding Haiti‚ Finding History in Zora Neale Hurtson’s Their Eyes Were Watching God” ‚ Stuelke examines damaging affects of imperialism on the black population in Haiti and how it directly correlates with mistreatment and institutionalized regression of African Americans in the United States. This article is relevant to Their Eyes Are watching God because it portrays the dual control that the U.S government holds over both Haitians and African Americans‚ which Hurston depicts through the various
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In this essay the plot of the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God will be discussed throughout the Freytag Pyramid. The Freytag pyramid structure includes the exposition‚ rising action‚ climax‚ falling action‚ and denouement. The novel is based around the life of the narrator Janie and her life experiences. It also gives an insight of how the black community in the novel felt about Janie and her actions as well as her decisions. This novel is considered a romantic novel because Janie has the most
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Michelle Sheehan Professor Park Multicultural American Literature February 22‚ 2013 Their Eyes Were Watching God: An Untraditional Happy Ending Their Eyes Were Watching God brings us on a journey through Janie’s life‚ focusing mainly on her three marriages. Throughout the majority of the novel‚ it seems as if Janie is in search of a man to fulfill her wants and needs in life. Towards the end of the book‚ when Tea Cake unexpectedly passes away‚ a whole new idea comes to fruition. Janie was not
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