Their Eyes Were Watching God: Janie fights for her own expectations “We will always tend to fulfill our own expectation of ourselves” by Brian Tracy. In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, Janie, the main character, fights for her rights and her expectations instead of listening to those around her. Nanny expected Janie to get married to someone who has money, land, and protect her. This is true in four main ways. First, Nanny expects Janie to marry Logan, a rich man. Second
Charater of Janie in Their Eyes Were Watching God In Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God, Janie Crawford is the heroine. She helps women to deal with their own problems by dealing with hers. She deals with personal relationships as well as searches for self-awareness. Janie Crawford is more than a heroine, however, she is a woman who has overcome the restrictions placed on her by the oppressive forces and people in her life. As a young woman, Janie had no complaints
The story ‘their eyes were watching god’ is about Janie Crawford and her search for love in a world where women were denied everything including love and their voice. She is portrayed as a heroine, who undergoes through many disappointments in search of unconditional and fulfilling love. Moreover, she is a heroine following her desire to gain autonomy in a gender biased society. The novel also talks about the different types of love that Janie has experienced and how this has shaped her life as an
main character Janie Crawford: Both the narrator and protagonist of the novel, Janie is black woman with partial white ancestry. She is noticed by her straight-Caucasian like hair and light black skin, giving her beautiful physical beauty. But behind her beauty – she is strong willed, curious, and defies gender stereotypes. Janie tries to find fulfillment on her quest for wholeness and individualism. As a child, Janie was raised by her grandmother, Nanny. Nanny decides for Janie to marry Logan
Were Watching God, the protagonist, Janie, experiences three marriages, one of which ends in divorce and the other two in death. Many readers may question the values of Janie and her seemingly ‘gold- digger’ Nanny as they both seem to be chasing the unattainable, a perfect marriage with a rich husband. As the novel plays out, the reader goes deeper into Nanny and Janie’s values and how they affect Janie’s three marriages. In the article “The Death of Janie Crawford: Tragedy and the American Dream
Janie Mae Crawford serves as the protagonist of one of Zora Neale Hurston’s most notable works Their Eyes Were Watching God. From her grandmother Nanny to her last husband Tea Cake, Janie has always been a victim to those attempting to decide her fate for her. Her grandmother determining who she loves, Logan and Jody treating her as a possession and Tea Cake jealousy and stubbornness all lead to the climatic point in Janie’s life where she blossoms into the strong woman she is becomes in the end
similar to some people, such as Janie, being treated as a slave while others act as slaveholders while others act differently to the situation such as Mrs. Turner who degrades those with a darker skin color. That relationship of “mules and brutes” is foreshadowed in Janie’s relationship with both Logan and Jody when they each buy a mule for her when they are treating her as the mule had been treated by the previous owner. Similarly, we also see in regards to Janie how she learns of how Mrs. Turner
Janie and Nanny’s relationship is that of a mother daughter relationship and that of a father daughter relationship.Since Janie’s parents were not in her life Nanny stepped up to the plate and had to play the role of mother and father to Janie “ You aint got no papa, you might jus’ as well say no mama, for de good she do yuh. You ain’t got nobody but me.” (Hurston 15)” . When Nanny first caught Janie kissing Johnny Taylor she reacted like a father, in that time traditionally would striking Janie
care towards Janie. Towards the beginning of Tea Cake and Janie’s marriage, Janie’s flashback shows Tea Cake bringing out Janie’s fear and insecurities. Hurston writes, “That was when she found out her two hundred dollars was gone” (Hurston 118), and wrote about Annie Tyler. The quote shows Tea Cake leaving early and taking Janie’s money, only to come back late at night like Annie Tyler’s story. Tea Cake’s actions leave Janie distraught and increases the feeling of angst in Janie when she has an
the book, Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, Janie the main character has taken upon many different types of persona’s. She was a girl with Nanny; Next she was a married girl with many responsibilities she didn’t know how to handle. After running away with Joe she was free-spirited and fun, but that changed over time and she became shut in and obedient. But in the end she became the person she always wanted to be. Janie always tried to do what she thought was right, but in the standards