Analysis of Janie’s Relationships In Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston‚ Janie. finds herself. and discovers her. voice through her. marriages with Joe Starks‚ Tea Cake‚ and Logan Killicks. Each of. her relationships. bring her. closer to. her goal. of finding. love. Janie is. a girl. who. lived the. majority of. her life as others thought. she should. as a black. woman. When she was very young‚ her mother abandoned her and. her. Nanny raised. her. Nanny holds. a very. strict moral
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The novel Their Eyes Were Watching God written by Zora Neale Hurston follows the journey of the central character Janie Crawford. Janie spends her time in southern Florida trying to find her voice and true love. During this process‚ she finds herself in two marriages with men that greatly differ from each other. These two men go by the names of Joe Starks and Vergile “Tea Cake” Woods. They both have very different impacts on Janie’s path to achieve her life goals. After Janie has a failed marriage
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a lot to them‚ they might just have to lose everything else they have. In Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ by Zora Neale Hurston‚ this quote rings true. Hurston shows that by using symbolism and a bit of irony throughout the story. As a young woman‚ Janie wanted love‚ true love. In the beginning of the novel and Janie ’s journey‚ she is under a blossoming pear tree where she spends most of her days. She is watching the bees fly to the blossoms‚ when she has an epiphany. “So this was a marriage! She
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Their Eyes were Watching God‚ written by Zora Neale Hurston‚ is a unique novel about the experiences of a black woman‚ told mostly through a rich‚ continuous use of metaphors. Three of the most important metaphors Hurston uses are the porch‚ the pear tree‚ and the horizon. The porch represents the black community with its conventions and judgements. The pear tree symbolizes the epiphany about Janie’s sexuality and her hopes for her future that the main character Janie experiences when she is 16.
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read using the southern dialect among blacks to spice up the story. The black southern dialect adds authenticity to the characters making them interesting and easy to relate to. Dialect makes the characters seem real and believable. In "Their eyes were watching God" dialect is used to portray
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My piano teacher once told me to first accept myself for who I am in order for others to accept me. If I did not first accept myself‚ why should others accept me? In Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ Janie strives to find happiness by living her life the way others want her to live it‚ but she misses the most important factor‚ so she is never truly happy. Janie feels empty‚ and constantly strives to find a way to fill that void. Towards the end of the novel‚ however‚ Janie realizes the key
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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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relationships and the latter comes from non-symbiotic ones. Zora Neale Hurston explores these ideas in her 1937 novel‚ There Eyes Were Watching God. The novel explores a story of a fair-skinned African American woman‚ Janie Crawford‚ and her evolving selfhood‚ confidence and independence through three marriages in which she experiences trials and finds her purpose. More complex than just a love story‚ Hurston shows us the story of a woman who refused to live in sorrow and persevered to find her maturity
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Zora Neale Hurston‚ a woman of moving‚ “anthropological and folkloric field work” had taken the underground literature world by storm with her 1937 work of “Their Eyes Were Watching God” ‚ a moving piece of magical work for the life of the oppressed woman. With references to her own life such as Eatonville and the multiple marriages‚ I began to see how though there are traits of a non- feminist novel it does have the correct tones of feminism. Being as though the novel was written in the 20th century
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these are the years for asking questions. So that foreshadows that the years for answers is coming. I believe the answers that she will receive will not be what she expects and will probably have some irony to the previous questions she asked. | “I god‚ yeah. But not de house Ah specks tuh live in. Dat kin wait till Ah make up mah mind where Ah wants it located. Ah figgers we all needs uh store in uh big hurry” | Pg 40 | To me‚ this shows that Joe puts others before himself. He wants to set up a store
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