Their Eyes Were Watching God Though I read a variety of books throughout my AP Literature and Composition class this year, the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, stood out among the others. It tells a story about a woman named Janie and her journey of finding true love. Janie’s dream of true love first blooms while she is lying under a pear tree at the age of 16 after connecting a bee in a pear tree blossom to love. From this point on, Janie yearns for true love. Her journey involves many obstacles, though, including her grandmother forcing her to marrying a rich man named Logan and an abusive second husband named Jody, but these obstacles never stopped Janie from achieving her dream. These experiences only helped Janie grow as a person and also aided in fully shaping her dream. After she liberates herself from those that held her back, she manages to achieve her dream by marry a man who respected her, Tea Cake. Janie’s journey inspired me to not be afraid to move on and to always persevere through obstacles to accomplish my dreams because struggles only strengthen you. …show more content…
This evoked the idea that if I want to reach my potential, it is necessary for me to follow my heart and leave situations holding me back. Just like Janie left the people delaying her dream of true love in the past, I realized I need to do the same to achieve my goals. Emerging from my comfort zone and exploring where my goals take me will open up new opportunities similar to when Janie experienced new adventures after leaving her home town and Logan, which eventually lead to completing her goal. For me, attending IUSB in the fall is emerging from my comfort zone. Janie’s success after leaving comforted me in believing I made the right decision. Moving away from Columbia City and my family will be a change, but I am confident that, just like Janie, leaving my home town will benefit
Even before Joe’s death, Janie “was saving up feelings for some man she had never seen. She had an inside and an outside now and suddenly she knew not how to mix them.”(75) Joe’s influences controlled Janie to the point where she lost her independence and hope. She no longer knew how to adapt to the change brought upon her. When she finally settles and begins to gain back that independence, the outward existence of society came back into play. “Uh woman by herself is uh pitiful thing. Dey needs aid and assistance.”(90) Except this time Janie acted upon her own judgment and fell for someone out of the ordinary. Tea Cake was a refreshing change for Janie, despite the society’s disapproval. “Janie looked down on him and felt a self-crushing love. So her soul crawled out from its hiding place.”(128) This was what she had always dreamt of. When she was with Tea Cake, she no longer questioned inwardly, she simply rejected society’s opinions and acted upon her own desires.
I enjoyed Their Eyes Were Watching God's grasp on imagination, imagery and phrasing. Janie's dialogue and vernacular managed to carry me along, slipping pieces of wisdom to me in such a manner that I hardly realize they are ingesting something deep and true. Their Eyes Were Watching God recognizes that there are problems to the human condition, such as the need to possess, the fear of the unknown and resulting stagnation. The book does not leave us with the hopelessness of Fitzgerald or Hemingway, rather, it extends a recognition and understanding of humanity's need to escape emptiness. "Dem meatskins is got tuh rattle tuh make out they's alive (183)" Her solution is simple: "Yuh got tuh go there tuh know there." Janie
In both the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, and the poem “Girl” by Jamaica Kincaid, young girls are lectured on who they should be in life and how they should act.
Joe was sweet at first, then his true feelings about women come out and Janie looses her love she thought she had for him. He soon dies after their separation. Janie then falls in love with a man named Tea Cake. He is the man with whom she has a wonderful, loving, happy marriage.
In Zora Neale Hurston’s novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Janie, the protagonist, experiences relief at the end of the novel. The novel begins at the end, emphasizing the importance of her moral reconciliation. Though at the beginning, it appears she returns home defeated, it is contrary. She returns home triumphant in finding her peace and fulfillment. When Janie starts to take things into her own hands instead of relying on her faith of others, she finally finds herself and joy. She needed to experience love in her own way to find what she was missing and what she needed in her love and her life.
Throughout life we realize the impact of just words have on our life. There’s many events that have come out of people’s gossip, rumors, or judgmental attitudes. In Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Hurston, the effects of words had an impact that led to major events in Janie's life, both positive and negative ones. Gossip and rumors was a reoccurring event throughout the book which had major outcomes.
While reading the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, I examined the motif of love and free will in which intertwines with the motif of gender roles. As the book prolongs, Janie is seen continuously searching to fulfill her pursuit of finding the true love she once fanaticized of. Janie first crafted her own representation of love while “stretched on her back beneath the pear tree in the alto chant of the visiting bees” (11). Her young innocence is connected to the intimacy of nature in which the “bee [sank] into the sanctum of a bloom” (11). Janie’s belief on marriage is represented through the usage of a bee and its balanced relationship to the blossom on the pear tree. The scent of the pear blossoms and the “chant”
Meredith Mannion Mrs. Worrall Literature of Controversy En 137-2 8 October 2014 Their Eyes Were Watching God Symbols represent something of a higher meaning. In Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston, the pear tree to Janie represents all of her dreams, hopes, and plans for the future. The pear tree is the exemplary love for Janie in her lifetime.
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston tells the story of Janie and her journey to find herself. She went through a lot meeting different people specifically men to help her understand what she really wanted in her future. Throughout her life, Janie was on a mission to chase her dreams and find her happiness by experiencing new horizons, which suggest that in order to be happy one has to push out of the comfort zone.
Hurston illustrated that how blacks provided American culture with “its only genuine folk tradition”. She was “the only key writer of the Harlem literary movement to carry out a organized study of Afro-American folklore”. In Their Eyes Were Watching God (first published in 1937), she describes her black identity as a consequent from African heritage. Since her early life in Eatonville, Hurston was nurtured by colorful, figurative storytelling. Hurston’s folk pride is very well documented in her portrayal of Eatonville in almost all her novels. She observed this little black hamlet as a haven in the race biased US. Her characters experience tranquility and prosperity only at
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston revolves around the struggles of Janie Starks to find a certain form of love in a still much divided time in society. This essential theme of love is not actually brought out in full effect until the death of Janie’s second husband, Joe Starks. This death brings about the discovery of Tea Cake, a man who fulfills Janie’s views on love, via the compositions of springtime: bright skies, sunny days, and bugs flying around. It took Janie a constant search for this type of love, and after the death of Joe, she finally found it.
Their Eyes Were Watching God, authored by Zora Neal Hurston, tells the story of an African American woman named Janie living in the 1900s who spends her life trying to find self-fulfillment through love. She marries two men before she finds her one true love. Hurston uses symbols such as the pear tree and the horizon, Janie’s hair, and the hurricane to define Janie. Judgment is also a reoccurring element used by Hurston to show Janie's quest for love and the independence that she gains in her journey. Throughout her life, Janie also has to fight the stereotypical role that is expected of her by other people.
Tea Cake proves to Janie’s true love. He is not the ideal man for Janie in the view of Janie’s society as he is twelve years younger than Janie, lacks the land and respectability that Logan provides for Janie, and the entitlement stability that Jody provides for Janie. In fact, her relationship with Tea Cake brought upon malicious gossip and a negative view upon Janie. However, Tea Cake replicates the love that Janie expresses for him, which brings forth a two-sided relationship, rather than a one-sided relationship that Janie experiences in the past. Janie’s ability to fall and stay in love is rare in the novel because in Black fiction it is common that love is one sided in order for one of the partners to achieve success (O’Banner 46). Moreover, “Tea Cake neglects the form of the material relationship of marriage ordained by Nanny and realized by Logan Killicks and Joe Starks” (Gates 83). In addition, he adds on this youthfulness and adventurous side of Janie that she is incapable of seeing due to the restraints placed on Black woman (Gates 88). Unlike her previous marriages, Janie is not confined and is able to find herself. Tea Cake makes a vital contribution in finding her own values and search for
The topic of racism is a very intriguing one for me. Other authors criticized Zora Neal Hurtson that she, being a black woman during the black liberation movement in the 1910’s, should be writing about black people being set free and how they are being suppressed by the world around them. Instead, Zora mainly deals with the issues of the women being suppressed and not allowed to be free. This idea itself mirrors that of freeing black people, but yet authors of the time were not able to see that, they called her book artificial and did not help them in their quest for freedom.
The story “There Eyes Were Watching God”, by Zora Neale Hurston, is a story that takes place in Florida in the early 1900s. The book is about the struggle of a woman to find true love in life. This woman is named Jane, she is a mixed race of both black and white, she is the protagonist of the story. Her goal in life was to find satisfying love with a man. The story uses race to show people's role, or importance in society. In the early 1900s, it wasn't uncommon to think black people were inferior to white people and held a lower standard of life. This led to many people being segregated and treated differently due to their skin color. The book “There Eyes Were Watching God”, is dominated by race driven thoughts, race in the story measures a person's superiority, leads to people being in different social classes, and shows how people are racist for no justifiable reason.