Zora Neale Hurston reveals inner self versus outward self through different vocal and lyrical diction. Zora Neale Hurston uses dialect to cause familiarity in her novel and described the struggles as an everyday African American faced in their community.The theme of my novel was gender roles and relationships not as a black woman, but as a human being. Even having the desire for love from different men.The connecting themes were that “Black folks” were proud of their culture instead of being oppressed. She showed that they were proud of their music, folktales, and oral traditions. That “Black folks” were proud of their culture instead of being oppressed. She showed that they were proud of their music, folktales, and oral traditions. Zora …show more content…
She speaks Southernly but in her mind she’s proper, despite her skin color. Racism is exposed here because it around the time slavery was abolished. She never let any negative thoughts distract her from trying to find love within her mental and physical being. The point of view is Third point of View, that’s being told by a narrator that is coming from Janie’s thoughts. Zora establishes exposition through storytelling of Janie’s past marriages and traumatizing events. The conflict in, “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” was that Janie’s desire for love was eradicated when her first two marriages failed bitterly. When she did move onto, Tea Cake, she was scared to love him. The tone of this book was somber and effusive. It’s presented through general diction and imagery. For example, the way Tea Cake talks to Janie while they were together. “When I ain’t got nothin’ you don’t git nothin’,” This quote represents how Tea Cake talks to Janie, but also seems to provide for her as being the man of the house. Zora uses certain words to pursue imagery and these help contribute to the climax of the …show more content…
Every trial and tribulation she undergoes, she continues to arise despite the commodities she faces. She learns something new either about her or the people around her. The static character is Joe Starks, Janie’s first husband. He never shows new emotions or new behavior. His anger strikes out on Janie whenever he gets the chance to. The Protagonist is Janie Crawford, who the book is revolved around. Every one interacts with her even the porch sitters who gossip about her. If they’re not directly communicating it’s through her friends or her husband, most of the time it’s gossip when she passes by. As she’s the main character she’s involved in every character. The Antagonist is Joe. He has dominance over Janie which prevents her from being a woman. She can’t wear her hair because it’s too beautiful which causes him to become jealous. He’s possessive and this is why she could never have a life of her own. “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” has a unique structure. It’s told in a “frame”. It begins with Janie conversing with Phoebe, her confidant. Also ends with Janie and Phoebe discussing the events after Janie left Eatonville,
Janie didn 't start living until Joe died and she met Teacake. With Teacake Janie felt alive, they understood and respected each other. Their marriage was full of love and compassion, two things that Janie always wanted. Her marriage with Teacake ended in a tragedy, but Janie felt like she lived a life full of new beginnings, and she was content with that. All the men in Janie’s life
Janie states that her “‘own mind had tuh be squeezed and crowded out tuh make room for yours in me’”(Hurston 87) portraying the relationship and power dynamics Janie has with her second husband. There is a shift in power dynamics because Janie chose to express her feelings in the most vulnerable state that Joe Starks was in. She makes her way towards the mirror and “had told her girl self to wait for her.” The little girl that she once saw had now become “a handsome woman” that “had taken her place”(Hurston 87). For Janie, Joe Starks was a lesson and a stepping stone to guide her path to finding herself in her relationships and where she stands as an individual.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Janie deals with external conflicts that end up changing her as a person. Many of these conflicts were caused by the types of
The main theme of Their Eyes Were Watching God is not love. The love would be just a tool to lead the story smoothly. However, this story is expressing many important thing through the Janie’s progress of love. And the author uses many thing such as metaphor and contrast to show
In The Eyes are Watching God, the author Zora Neale Hurston expresses the struggles of women and black societies of the time period. When Hurston published the book, communities were segregated and black communities were full of stereotypes from the outside world. Janie, who represents the main protagonist and hero, explores these communities on her journey in the novel. Janie shows the ideals of feminism, love, and heroism in her rough life in The Eyes. Janie, as the hero of the novel, shows the heroic qualities of determination, empathy, and bravery.
The novel’s protagonist, Janie Crawford, a woman who dreamt of love, was on a journey to establish her voice and shape her own identity. She lived with Nanny, her grandmother, in a community inhabited by black and white people. This community only served as an antagonist to Janie, because she did not fit into the society in any respect. Race played a large factor in Janie being an outcast, because she was black, but had lighter skin than all other black people due to having a Caucasian ancestry.
When Janie first arrives to the town, she is greeted by envious glares and cruel remarks from the porch sitters. “Seeing [Janie] as she was” made them remember the “envy they had stored up from other times.” Their jealousy ate them them through till they couldn’t take it any longer. They made “burning statements with questions, and killing tools out of laughs. It was mass cruelty.
Hurston reflects the struggle of black women in the early 1900s America. However this author's purpose was to describe how in these times anger and societies denial were the recipe for strength and revival. Hurston uses religious allusions, swaying psychological perspectives, and crude gender roles to relocate the readers from our modern day lives to inside Janie’s consciousness and how a black woman overcame and shattered societal expectations. Soon after Janie was forced into a planned marriage, she realized it got in the way of her self quest to find love.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston, Janie suffers from hardship in two relationships before she can find her true love. Janie explains to her best friend, Pheoby, how she searches for love. Therefore Pheoby wants to hear the true story, rather than listening to the porch sitters. Throughout the book Janie experiences different types of love with three different men; Logan Killicks, Joe Starks, and Vergible "Tea Cake" Woods. At 16 Janie marries Logan Killicks.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston uses lots of characterization and figurative language to give the reader an inside on Janie’s feelings and surroundings. In chapter the way the men focus of Janie’s physical features, and women criticize Janie’s hygiene and looks allows the reader to make an image of how Janie looks. The men were “saving with the mind what they lost with the eye,” and the women “took the faded shirt and muddy overalls and laid them away for remembrance,” this also shows how the women were going to keep that image of Janie in their head to hold over her (Hurston 2). Janie has a love for nature, the figurative language and metaphors allows the reader to understand Janie and her connections with nature. Hurston uses the pear tree in the backyard to show how Janie felt free and
Their Eyes Were Watching God tells the story of how one man, Tea Cake, changes how a grown woman named Janie views life, opportunity, and happiness. Zora Neale Hurston employs parallelism in order to reveal the dynamic of this relationship between Janie and Tea Cake and writes, “He drifted off into sleep and Janie looked down on him and felt a self-crushing love. So her soul crawled out from its hiding place” (Hurston 128). At the very end of the book, Hurston writes again, “Here was peace. She pulled in her horizon like a great fish-net.
“Their Eyes Were Watching God” is a novel written by Zora Neale Hurston. The novel portrays Janie, a middle aged black woman who tells her friend Pheoby Watson what has happened to her husband Tea Cake and her adventure. The resulting telling of her story portrays most of the novel. Throughout the novel, Zora Neale Hurston presents the theme of love, or being in a relationship versus freedom and independence, that being in a relationship may hinder one’s freedom and independence. Janie loves to be outgoing and to be able to do what she wants, but throughout the book the relationships that she is in with Logan,Jody and Tea Cake, does not allow her to do that.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston uses speech as a tool to show the progression of the story. Janie Crawford, the main character of the novel, finds her true identity and ability to control her voice through many hardships. When Janie’s grandmother dies she is married off, to be taken care of. In each marriage that follows, she learns what it is to be a woman with a will and a voice. Throughout the book, Janie finds herself struggling against intimidating men who attempt to victimize her into a powerless role.
One of the universal themes of literature is the idea that children suffer because of the mistakes of an earlier generation. The novel "Their Eyes Were Watching God" follows the story of Janie Mae Crawford through her childhood, her turbulent and passionate relationships, and her rejection of the status quo and through correlation of Nanny 's life and Janie 's problems, Hurston develops the theme of children 's tribulations stemming from the teachings and thoughts of an earlier generation. Nanny made a fatal mistake in forcibly pushing her own conclusions about life, based primarily on her own experiences, onto her granddaughter Janie and the cost of the mistake was negatively affecting her relationship with Janie. Nanny lived a hard life and she made a rough conclusion about how to survive in the world for her granddaughter, provoked by fear. " Ah can’t die easy thinkin’ maybe de menfolks white or black is makin’ a spit cup outa you: Have some sympathy fuh me.
Janie Crawford Killiks Starks Woods is the main character in the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, where she learns what's it's like to go from marriage to marriage looking for love. In the novel, Hurston utilizes the pivotal moment when Janie realizes that marriage doesn’t always mean love to show Janie's coming of age and psychological development which is used to show that love doesn't always come first. Logan Killicks was Janie's first marriage, which was brought about after Nanny (her grandmother) decided that she need to be married after she caught Janie and a young boy kissing when she was 16. After that Janie finds herself being thrown into some random marriage with some man she barely knew, and for a reason