Janie Essay

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    The Shot by; Janie Ferrone “1,2,3 lady mariners.” We yelled as running on to the court, before the game started we showed armada our confidence. A few minutes later we started the game, I really wanted to play as hard as I can and I knew that I could if I tried. Suddenly I got the ball and went for the shot, but I saw how it hit the ground with no touch of the net. ( i knew i needed more courage)

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    negative affects on them as they seek other relationships, specifically with the opposite sex. Firstly, both main characters’ relationship with their respective mothers always remains in hindsight and affects their future relations with others. Secondly, Janie and Dunstan both create a healthy, strong bond with a character of the opposite sex respectively, only to have it taken away from them due to external influences. Lastly, they find successful people whose minor flaws prove to have the greater impact

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    As Janie reached the end of her forties she finally meets the man of her dreams, Tea Cake. Tea Cake was about 12 years younger than Janie when they first met. It was a Sunday afternoon, everyone went to the baseball game all except Janie who was keeping watch of the store. Then a young man appears wanting to buy cigarettes, as the young man and Janie talk he says he wants to play checkers. Tea cake woes Janie in with a game of checker. There was not a single man in Eatonville that had asked Janie

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    Janie’s journey from city to city, accompanied by various partners, helped her to discover self-awareness. Each husband Janie had had pushed her onto a path to finding herself. Tea Cake, Jody, and Logan affected her life in different ways, both positively and negatively. Furthermore, she also traveled to multiple sites, with each being a whole new life experience. In the end, Janie is content with her journey, and focuses on her own well being. Located in West Florida is where Janie’s first marriage

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    God, by Zora Neale Hurston, the protagonist Janie Crawford constantly resists efforts to be “classed off” from other members of her community. Taking place in the early 1900s in the American South, Janie is a fair-skinned African American woman searching for love and identity. As she goes through marriages, Janie gets increasingly closer to finding true love. Her three husbands in order of occurrence are Logan Killicks, Joe Starks, and Vergile Woods. Janie faces the constant struggle of finding true

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    Love and communication played a big role in the relationship between Janie and Tea Cake. In chapters 18 and 19, we can see their relationship start to heal (after the jealousy and abuse). During the storm, Janie and Tea Cake are able to help each other out. When Janie gets entangled in the rough waves. As said in the chapter, “She screamed terribly and released the roofing…. He heard her and sprang up (Hurston 165). Tea Cake immediately risks his life to save his beloved wife. In the process, he

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    Class theme on Janie In accordance with the turbulent time period it was written in, Their Eyes Were Watching God comments on many issues within the society of the 1930’s through various themes such as love, nature, and societal standards. However, the theme of societal standards and expectations is perhaps the most prominent in the story, furthering the main character Janie’s development the most. In the book, despite the standards and rules imposed on her by society, Janie learns to overcome

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    different kinds of love through her life as a result of gaining an independence on it. Because Janie strives for her own , but the others tend to judge her simply because she is daring enough to achieve her own autonomy. In her search for love and in the losses that she suffer in her life, She gain independence, but it begin slowly in the center part of the novel. Therefore before things happen. Janie hold her spark of courage and independence in the time when she was trying to leave the loveless

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    The story that Janie tells Pheoby includes the novel itself and communicates how Janie has at long last discovered her voice and is willing to recount to her story to a future era of women. This procedure of discovering her voice is a troublesome voyage in which she perseveres through two loveless marriages and encounters social oppression that causes her to hold back her tongue and prevents personal development. Janie demonstrates her inner soul and voice by leaving Logan for Jody and letting Logan

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    article “Tuh de Horzion and Back: The Female Quest in Their Eyes Were Watching God”, Missy Dehn Kubitschek argues against her fellow critics’ common misconception of Janie as “a passive prize” (109), in favor of, recognizing the “the independence and strength” (109) within her. Kubitschek showcases the independence and strength of Janie through outlining her heroine’s quest throughout, Their Eyes Were Watching God, according to the five qualifications, “answering the call to adventure, crossing the

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