In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston portray Janie as feeling exposed and humiliated frequently during her relationship with Joe Starks. This highlights how women were treated and viewed by men during the time period.Janie considers running away but believes she has grown unattractive due to the constant remarks she received by Jody. “Don’t stand dere rollin yo’ pop eyes at me wid yo’ rump hangin nearly to yo’ knees!”(Hurston 78). Jody is pestering Janie about her appearance when he himself realizes he is beginning to sag and his body is bulging.Janie gets humiliated by Jody in order for him to feel empowered and gain attention. “It was like somebody snatched part of a women’s clothes while she wasn’t looking and the streets were
In the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston directed her writing towards both men and women, but for different reasons. She wrote to men to make them conscious of how they treated women and that women can do manual labor too. She wrote to women to make them realize that they are equal to men even though they are women. In her writing, she mainly expresses the theme of feminism through the female protagonist, Janie Crawford. Throughout the book, Janie is victimized by several men by being told to do what a women was expected to do, which means that the men thought of her as weak and as a woman that they can tyrannize into doing woman roles. Jody Starks is a major example of a man who thinks that women are not anything other
Early in the text of Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston employs imagery and syntax to show Janie uncovering the growth and power she has over her own life. This sort of revelation comes to Janie as Hurston describes that “It had called her to come and gaze on a mystery. From barren brown seems to glistening leaf-buds; from the leaf-buds to snowy
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston follows the main character Janie’s journey to find love on her own terms. The first man she married, she married to appease Nanny, her grandmother. The second man she marries is Jody Starks, who she marries because she failed to find love for her previous husband. After the oppressive Starks dies, Janie remarries Vergible “Tea Cake” Woods, the only man she has ever loved. They move to “the muck” where Janie feels more at home than ever before because she is with Tea Cake and because she can choose to indulge in her own relations without anyone telling her what to do or with whom to associate.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston uses Janie to show that one must have a voice in order to have a sense of who one is and have control over oneself. Janie is a dynamic character and other characters in the novel contributes to her attributes because each of them control specks of her life. To develop as a character, Janie undergoes quests to find her identity and retain it. It is arguable that Janie hangs onto pieces of who she is as she discovers more about herself and gain control over those aspects because Hurston sets the novel up as a frame story. With a frame story, there are reflections happening, so in turn, she must have learned from what she experienced between the beginning and the end of the novel. In addition
The novel Their Eyes Were Watching God follows the life of a beautiful female named Janie Crawford. Throughout the story, Janie demonstrates the struggle to escape being shaped into becoming a submissive woman. She encounters three men who each attempt to make her a submissive wife. In each of her relationships with these men, she is either obliged or pressured to follow their orders. Although Janie struggles to hold on to her independence, she manages to persevere every time. Janie is a strong independent woman who does not allow herself to be suppressed.
Janie, in Their Eyes were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, was a unique individual; as a half-white, half-black girl growing up in Florida in the early 1930's, a lifetime of trials and search for understanding was set for her from the start. As the main character she sought to finally find herself, true love, and have a meaningful life. Growing up, in itself, provides a perfect opportunity for finding that essential state of self-realization and ideal comfort. Michael G. Cooke reviews Their Eyes Were Watching God in his article "The Beginnings of Self-Realization"; within the article it is falsely criticized that every time Janie is negatively impacted she grows to become more
The exact connotation of the title is up for discussion, although it touches upon many of the book’s important themes. There are two primary points in the novel that reference the title. Firstly, "The time was past for asking the white folks what to look for through that door. Six eyes were questioning God" (150). Shortly thereafter, a second significant sentence appears: "They seemed to be staring at the dark, but their eyes were watching God" (151).
“Their Eyes Were Watching God” had Janie face several conflicts throughout the book, conflicts that relate to the real world and real world human rights issues. “Their Eyes Were Watching God” covers human rights issues such as gender inequality, the right to marry the person you love, the right to be an equal within a marriage, and racism. The novel’s ending, where Janie returns back to Eatonville after having to kill Tea Cake, is surprising, to say the least, and creates a sense of shock and slight confusion within the reader. The resolution of the novel shows that the author intended to show each of the aforementioned human rights issues, and how none of the issues are guaranteed to have a happy ending. Zora Neale Hurston also seems to imply,
herself. Janie, all her life, had been pushed around and told what to do and how to live her life. She searched and searched high and low to find a peace that makes her whole and makes her feel like a complete person. To make her feel like she is in fact an individual and that she’s not like everyone else around her. During the time of ‘Their Eyes’, the correct way to treat women was to show them who was in charge and who was inferior. Men were looked to as the superior being, the one who women were supposed to look up to and serve. Especially in the fact that Janie was an African American women during these oppressed
When reading Their Eyes Were Watching God, I made an instant connection to the book. The book’s dialogue was not written in correct English; it is written using country slang. At first, it was hard to read, without having to reread it or without having to read it aloud, but I caught on as I kept reading. Pheoby, a character who can be considered as being “two-faced”, reminds me of people my age. Before the story started coming from one perspective, it did not focus on just one character. Pheoby and a few other women were sitting on their porch talking about Janie. Janie was a woman, who was criticized by Pheoby and her friends for leaving the town with a youthful man and her long, fine hair. Most young adults and even some older women are condemned
Despite cultural pressures, individuals will instead follow their own moral compass. Their Eyes were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston, follows Janie’s path of self-discovery. When she in a relationship with her second husband, she is given the label of a “skank”, someone who goes around to several men instead of settling down. The novel took place in the late 1930’s in the South, the time was a male-dominated society and stereotypes of women limited the options of a female’s future. Janie has been placed under the category of being a bad person because the community, her husband, and family’s ethics clash with her own morals. Janie reflects to her friend Phoebe on how her grandmother restricted her future by forcing her first marriage: “...had
In Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, emotions such as love and hatred are showcased through the multiple marriages of Janie Crawford and her three husbands, impacting her life with bitterness, torture and ultimately peace due to Janie’s naive ideals of lust and desire. Nanny arranges Janie’s marriage to Logan Killicks, a responsible and financially stable man, after she catches Janie kissing the handsome Johnny Taylor. Although Nanny’s intentions are for the well-being of her only granddaughter, Janie finds herself losing interest in Killicks as the marriage turns bitter. Expecting love to save her lifeless marriage with Killicks is a false ideal leading Janie to leave the relationship and fall into the arms of Jody Starks. As jealousy captures the suave and idyllic Starks, he turns into a demanding monster, dictating the miniscule movements of Janie, torturing her mind and soul. Although Janie’s innocent desire for passion revives during her marriage with Tea Cake, several misunderstandings lead to a devastating end but eventually brings peace to her heart. Hoping her granddaughter will find happiness, Nanny arranges the marriage of Janie to Logan Killicks, a respected and monetarily secure man. After a year, Janie realizes her marriage to Killicks is a loveless union causing bitter disputes.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston emphasizes that respect empowers. When Janie’s respect for Killicks dwindles, so does Killicks’ power over Janie. Killicks’ lack of power in his and Janie’s relationship is evident in Janie’s fearless refusal to be Killicks’ workhorse. Killicks’ desperate desire to control Janie’s love for him (or lack of love) manifests into verbal abuse, through which he tries to cut down Janie’s sense of security in herself by telling her that there aren’t “no mo’ fools” who would be willing to work and feed Janie, especially after her attractive body loses its youthfulness (30).
Their Eyes Were Watching God is sometimes classified as a feminist novel, but that is not so. Feminism is often associated with men and women being equal without a doubt. This passage establishes a fundamental difference between genders. Chapter six is a prime example of these gender differences. Chapter six shows Joe’s need for control. During an argument between Janie and Joe, Joe states, “Somebody got to think for women and chillun and chickens and cows. I god, they sho don’t think none theirselves” (71). Hurston’s statement here suggests that men during that time period needed to feel superior to
“She was seeking confirmation of the voice and vision, and everywhere she found and acknowledged answers. A personal answer for all other creations except herself. She felt an answer seeking her, but where? When? How?” (Hurston 11). This quote exemplifies Janie’s desire for answers throughout her three relationships, displaying what she is longingly seeking for in life. Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, follows the life of protagonist Janie Crawford, a confident, middle-aged black woman who goes throughout life discovering her quest for spiritual enlightenment and self-discovery. In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston explains the hardships as ideas of maturity, sexism, and social class.