Their Eyes Were Watching God Essay

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    In Zora Neale Hurston’s novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Janie, the protagonist, struggles between two identities, her exterior life, a life drawn from the white world foisted upon her, and her interior life, a more vigorous free black woman, this being the one she tries to forge for herself throughout the novel. The relationship that Janie has with her Nanny ultimately set’s the stage for the conflict regarding her interior and exterior life. In addition to Nanny, her first two husbands…

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    There are a quite a few short stories, novels,and poetry that uses things to represent something else. This is also known as symbolism. Stories and novels such as “Their Eyes Were Watching God” by Zora Neale Hurston, “The Most dangerous Game” by Richard Connell, and “ The Giver” by Lois Lowry. These novels consist a great deal of symbols.Also, these symbols may have more than one meaning to them. In the novel “Ethan Frome”,there are many different things that symbolizes something. The symbols…

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    Their Eyes Were Watching God, one of the most influential novels to come out of the Harlem Renaissance, plays a crucial role in revealing the deep-rooted issue of misogyny during the era. As the protagonist, Janie Crawford, navigates the complexities of her three marriages, Zora Neale Hurston delves into the core of human emotion to develop Janie’s character throughout the novel. As Janie witnesses the deaths of her three marriages, she is transformed from a silenced wife to an icon of feminism;…

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    not work outside in the fields, as common laborers did. Their skin was not scourged by the sun. Dark skin was associated with a lower class of people. The darker the skin, the less valued in the culture. In Zora Neale Hurston’s novel, Their Eyes were Watching God, she explored the theme of physical attractiveness during the Harlem Renaissance period. Hurston’s…

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    Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, tells the story of a woman named Janie Crawford as she lives and grows throughout her life and marriages in Florida. Janie is a young woman around 16 who is being raised by her grandmother, Nanny, who is a former slave. Because of this fact, Nanny values financial security and respectability over anything else, and so she sees fit to marry Janie to a much older, ugly man named Logan Killicks. This newfound leap into womanhood at such a young age…

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    touch with God. So ever since Janie has officially been with Tea…

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    Power plays a key factor in Their Eyes Were Watching God, the dominant discourse is masculine, and the feminine is supposed to be submissive towards the men. Janie, the main character of the novel, plays both the dominant and submissive which in the case is the empowered and overpowered. She can be defined as a woman who is loving, caring, and self-willed. However, her power gets taken away from her from people who judge her and those who she loves dearly. Sometimes her being overpowered highly…

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    Their Eyes Were Watching God Zora Neale Hurston wrote this great book about a girl changing into a young women. Oprah changed it all she made the book seem like a love story but this could never be. In the movie Janie was seen as a strong young women but in the book she was just a young lady who listens everything that she was told to do. All of Janie’s marriages caused a dramatic change in her life, Oprah changed the main relationship in the movie. This book would reflect some young lady…

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    Symbols are arguably the most important part to a story. They add meaning and give life to the novel. Zora Neale Hurston uses symbols in Their Eyes Were Watching God to explain events. She also uses symbols to emphasize emotion and maturing of the women throughout the novel. Important symbols such as god, trees, and animals all make an impact on the development on the novel; however, trees is the most important symbol throughout the story. Hurston uses trees in the novel to emphasize the life of…

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    Oftentimes, one is able to find him or herself through a relationship. Zora Neale Hurston’s novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Janie, tells of an African American living in Florida in the 1960s goes from one marriage to the next, trying to redeem herself from her failed relationships in order find her own identity. As Janie begins her third marriage with Tea Cake…

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