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Their Eyes Were Watching God Movie Vs Book

Decent Essays

When Oprah Winfrey made the movie, “Their Eyes were Watching God,” she altered Janie’s relationships from the book that Zora Hurston had written. Oprah gives Janie strengths in the movie that she never had in the book. Oprah alters the relationships that Janie had and made every one different. The changes that Oprah made in the movie made Hurston’s book look bad. Oprah destroyed Janie’s character by making her appear stronger. Oprah made Janie stronger by giving her the ability to do tasks that involve strength. In the movie, Janie’s character got stronger by standing up for herself more, which she did not do in the book. In the book, Janie would not have had the courage to stand up for herself and say this to Joe. In the movie, Janie told …show more content…

Joe told Janie to put a head rag on as the mayor’s wife. She refused because she thought it would make her look like an old woman. However, in the book, she did not refuse to put the head rag on. In the book, when Joe told Janie “put this head rag on,” she puts it on because she always respects her husband. “What and wrap my head up like a old woman? How come?” Janie asked, “Cause I done told you too! You are the mayor’s wife” (Harpo). In the movie, Janie did not like being the mayor’s wife and she did not like wearing the head rag that she hated. However, in the book, she wore the head rag in respect of Joe. In the movie, when Joe went to buy more land, Janie went with him. In the book, she did not go with him to buy more land. In the movie, Joe told Janie, “Imma buy a hundred acres, then imma buy a hundred and four and I will sell the land we do not need to newcomers, Imma buy you your very own train card and we gonna criss cross this country first class” (Harpo). Joe and Janie also owned a store together and when he dies later in life, Janie decides not to sell the store in the movie. However, in the book she decided to sell the store because she did not want the townspeople to compare her husband Joe with her new boyfriend Tea Cake. In the book and the movie, after Joe is dead, Janie decided to run off with Tea Cake. Janie and Joe’s relationship changed when Oprah …show more content…

In the movie, Janie disrespects Nanny for the first time when she said, “Go to hell” (Harpo). Janie would have never said that in the book because she always respected Nanny no matter the situation. Janie said that because it shows what Oprah has changed from what Hurston wrote in the book. Nanny does not tell Janie about her mom not taking care of her and Janie wants to know more about the story. Janie does not know her mom and wants Nanny to tell her why her mom cannot take care of her. When Nanny begins to tell Janie about her mom, Leafy, she tells her about her memories of Leafy having no personal identity (no stable name), no social identity (she is rejected by her Black peers for living in the White folks’ back yard), no family identity (she does not know her mother or her father), and no racial identity (she is startled to learn that she is Black) (Miller). In the movie, when Nanny and Janie talk about her and Joe, Janie starts crying because she did not want to stay married with her husband because of the way he had treated her. In the movie, Janie has a few disrespectful acts towards Nanny, but in the book Janie always has a respectful relationship with Nanny no matter the

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