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    Speak Trees Analysis

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    Everyone in the class is given an apple for dissecting, and when Melinda gets hers, she immediately picks it up, smells it, then takes a bite. She then goes to reminisce about her childhood and how her dad used to take her to apple orchards and put her in the trees. She calls the whole memory a fantasy because it seems so far off and distant, due to the strained relationship Melinda now has with her parents. The next reference to trees is in chapter 21 of part 2 when Melinda first cuts

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    In the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston uses the horizon, the pear tree, and the bee and blossom as symbols of Janie’s ideas and dreams. In this paper, there will be the analysis of these symbols in the book and how they fit in the belief system and needs of Janie. In the book, the peach tree can be said to represent Jane’s identity as a woman and her budding sexuality. She compares her change to that of the pear tree blossoming. Like the tree, she could feel that she was now a grown

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    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. Janie grows throughout the book and her life is shaped around finding true love and finding herself through love. The pear tree is a reoccurring

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    The tree Melinda is assigned in art class symbolizes her and how she changes dramatically, for better or worse, throughout the book. In the near beginning Melinda draws trees that have been struck by lighting, the trees are dark, broken down and weary to symbolize how Melinda is feeling at this point. A great example of this is when Melinda says “For a solid week, ever since the pep rally, I’ve been painting watercolors of trees that have been hit by lightning. I try to paint them so they are nearly

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    As the traveling bee (Janie) once again meets spring, the sense of hope is reborn within the heart its being, carefully trying to deviate from any pear tree that calls to its attention. But seemingly enough, temptation lurks, and gets into the natural sense of the bee (Janie). Within the novel, Their Eyes were Watching God, the pear tree that caught Janie’s heart one last time with its “crushing scent” (pg. 127) was Tea Cake, the young tree that intoxicated the bee (Janie) with its utter peaceful

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    Alice Walker once said, “In nature, nothing is perfect and everything is perfect. Trees can be contorted, bent in weird ways, and they’re still beautiful.” This aligns perfectly with metaphors in the book Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson. In this story, Laurie uses the symbol of a tree to represent the main character, Melinda, as she struggles to overcome a difficult experience in her life. The trees represent Melinda’s transformation from trying to be someone she wasn’t, to becoming utterly depressed

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    Bertha Flowers is a short story about a woman who is of colour and helps a young girl in school named Marguerite, who is of colour as well. Mrs. Bertha Flowers helps Marguerite stand up for herself when she is feeling down about public speaking because she is of colour. Marguerite is the one telling the story, the narrator. The theme is this story is role models. Bertha Flowers is a very strong, very powerful and a very traditional woman who tries her hardest in everything. When Bertha helps Marguerite

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    While discovering her womanhood, Janie was not able to realize her importance on her own. As a result of her mental barriers, Janie, alone, was not able to see her beauty and her impact on others around her. Until she met Tea Cake, Janie lacked the mental resources to feel content with her current situation. When Tea enters Janie’s life, he aides her mental illness by uplifting her spirit and teaching her how to stand up for herself. “Ah betcha you don’t never go tuh de lookin’ glass and enjoy yo’

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    In 1937, Zora Neale Hurston spent seven weeks in Haiti writing what would become her most well-known and acknowledged piece of work. Their Eyes Were Watching God was born on September 18th, 1937, in New York. The novel told a hopeful tale of a woman finding a secure sense of independence and identity in the 1920s. Janie Mae Crawford is the protagonist of the novel. She knows family only in the form of her grandmother, who she refers to as Nanny. Each relationship that Janie is involved in blooms

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    Nature Themes in Hurston’s Novels, Their Eyes Were Watching God and Seraph on the Suwanee Nature themes resound throughout Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God and Seraph on the Suwanee. Perhaps two of the most notable instances where the lush Florida scenery augments the novels’ plot lines are the “tree scenes”, in which Janie kisses Johnny Taylor beneath the pear tree in Their Eyes Were Watching God (p. 10-12) and Arvey loses her virginity to Jim beneath the mulberry tree in Seraph on the

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