preview

How Does Janie's Identity In Their Eyes Were Watching God

Decent Essays

The story often told in relation to character growth is one of adolescence. However, in Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, the protagonist, Janie, has a personal growth that parallels her understanding of romantic relationships and transpires from her young adulthood well into her middle age. As time passes and Janie has different relationships with the men around her, her images of herself and what a meaningful relationship consists of are revised. Janie’s relationship with Joe is transformative in the sense that by evaluating their relationship, Janie is really evaluating her growth and ambitions as a woman. While her transformation within the context of her relationship with Joe creates a sense of closure because she handles his death as an escape to be her own person, her identity as an independent woman is a result of enduring an …show more content…

As Janie leaves her first husband, Logan, for Joe, it is evident she believes this new relationship will fulfill her image of a loving partnership that she imagined as a young woman when she thinks “From now until death she was going to have flower dust and springtime sprinkled over everything. A bee for her bloom. Her old thoughts were going to come in handy now, but new words would have to be made and said to fit them,” (Hurston 32). The floral imagery is quite idealistic as Janie looks into the beginning of her new life with Joe, showing that she really sees their relationship as a new beginning. While she had previously realized that “...marriage did not make love…” (Hurston 25), Janie is still idealizing her future in a way that may not be realistic considering she runs off to marry the first man that offers her an escape from an unloving marriage. However, there is some development in her image of herself because she now sees Joe as “a bee for her bloom” which places him in relation to her, rather than seeing

Get Access