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Zora Neale Hurston's Life

Decent Essays

“I love the way Janie Crawford left her husbands,” begins one of Alice Walker’s poems, alluding to the heroine of Zora Neale Hurston’s iconic Their Eyes were Watching God. Following the perspective of a black female in the 1930s and more importantly, written by a black female in the 1930s, today, Hurston’s work is one of the most influential books from the post-Harlem Renaissance. What ultimately makes the narrative so compelling is that her characters resonate with culture and complexity. Through the complex, deeply intimate narrative, Hurston writes about what is personal to her, making her novel— and thus, her values— personal for her readers as well.
Zora Neale Hurston did not live a happy life by any conventional standard. Born in either …show more content…

Like Hurston, Janie is also a black woman living in the post-reconstruction era. Eatonville, the place where Janie spends much of her life, was also Hurston’s hometown and both Janie and Hurston married several times. However, beyond the physical parallels, Hurston seems to characterize Janie in a juxtaposing manner, attempting to reconcile herself through a character who lived a life that she could never withstand. The causal relationship between captivity and voicelessness persists throughout the novel, juxtaposing Hurston’s own vocal personality and independent lifestyle. Unlike Hurston, who ran away from the family after disagreements with her step-mother, Janie Crawford ignores her own will and submits to her grandmother’s by marrying Logan Killicks. Hurston could never conform to the normatives of feministic success and marriage in her society, but Janie, in her second marriage, does exactly that. And while Hurston ended up breaking off her relationship to Punter in favor of continuing her career, Janie did not hesitate to relinquish her newfound freedom and marry Tea Cake. Hurston did not care for a character whose actions and life mirrored her own. Rather, she needed a character who would expose the importance of personal emancipation. While they lived two very different lives with very different approaches, in the end, Janie validates Hurston’s desire to uphold her personal

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