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Prompt: How does the possession of an object reveal certain characteristics that an individual carries ? Growing up, many children attach themselves to an object such as a blanket or a stuffed animal. These objects give the child comfort and serenity when in an environment in to which he or she is not accustomed. Author’s use rhetorical devices such as figurative language and symbols in order to help reveal certain characteristics pertaining to one’s identity.
Characters in Their Eyes Were Watching God Their Eyes Were Watching God is a narrative that showed the life of Janie Mae Crawford and went in the direction beginning with showing her life from the present, then then the majority of the book was a flashback, finally at the very last chapters the present was bought back to the reader. The publication had 1 consistent character throughout the book, and previously mentioned it was Janie Mae Crawford. The other important characters in the book were Jody Starks and Tea Cake, they both came into her life in and in respect, in a way effected her in major ways. The development of Janie thought the novel was greatly impacted by Jody, Tea Cake, even herself with making a change in her identity.
The tone from the author in this chapter was that he was angry, but was also sad. The author felt angry in this chapter because of when he was writing, he wrote about how the eve of Rosh Hashanah was the last day of that “cursed year”. Also, in the fourth paragraph of this chapter, he quoted “What are You, my God? I thought angrily.”
Literary Analysis The Quest for Independence Has one ever wonder what makes the world’s greatest novels so hard to put down? The ones that make one gasp aloud and bite one’s nails frantically; great novels that leave you on the edge of your seat, like, Romeo and Juliet, The Notebook, and even the Titanic. In each of these novels, they display a story of, the search for independence. In the novel, by Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God the protagonist, Janie Woods, begins her search for independence through three marriages and a life marked by poverty, trails and purpose.
Their Eyes Were Watching God Literary Analysis In the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston used three different husbands to show how Janie’s definition of love and marriage evolved. With her first marriage, she learned that love doesn’t automatically grow after marriage. In the second marriage, Janie learned that love could be confining and eventually ruin a relationship. The third and final marriage taught Janie that she needed to depend on herself rather than someone else for contentment.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston composed a passionate story of a beautiful African American woman in the early 1900s. It embodies how life was for the women of color, and the struggles they faced. Hurston used literary devices to show the struggles Jaine had to go through to find her voice and the power within herself. In the relationship between her and her first two husbands, she struggled to figure out if marriage was really the equivalent of happiness. Not knowing what she needed in life she struggled to find the feeling she had always craved.
All throughout Their Eyes Were Watching God, a novel by Zora Neale Hurston, the themes of uniformity, love, and more can be seen encircling the world of Janie Mae Crawford, the protagonist of the story. These symbols and motifs stretch farther into the contrasting locations of Eatonville and the Everglades. There are many prominent differences between the two places, as well as prominent meaning and themes surrounding the two different locations. Eatonville and The Everglades house thematic symbols that contrast one another. Eatonville, the central urban setting, represents conformity, suppression and stagnant standard.
The Janie at the end of the novel, “Their Eyes Were Watching God”, is far more different from the Janie at the beginning of the novel. As the novel continues, Janie goes through many life changing events due to the many communities she relocated to. In the beginning of the novel, Janie runs away from her first marriage with Logan Killicks for Jody Starks. Janie and Jody then moved to Eatonville, where they ran a store together until Jody’s final breath. Subsequently, Janie moves to different parts of Florida with Tea Cake, whom she met in Eatonville.
Many men in the book reserve the right to beat their wives and insult their intelligence simply because they’re having a bad day. Joe considers his home a refuge made comfortable by Janie and when the reality doesn’t live up to his expectations he takes out his frustration physically on his wife. Men in the novel seem to have some level of domestic violence as a means getting out their frustration. In the Book “Their Eyes Were Watching God” Zora Neale Hurston uses physical and emotion situations to show the oppression of women. In the book there were many example of oppression of women but the submission of women, the intellectual level of women and the beating of women are especially uses throughout the book.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston, Janie suffers from hardship in two relationships before she can find her true love. Janie explains to her best friend, Pheoby, how she searches for love. Therefore Pheoby wants to hear the true story, rather than listening to the porch sitters. Throughout the book Janie experiences different types of love with three different men; Logan Killicks, Joe Starks, and Vergible "Tea Cake" Woods. At 16 Janie marries Logan Killicks.
Janie Crawford Killiks Starks Woods is the main character in the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, where she learns what's it's like to go from marriage to marriage looking for love. In the novel, Hurston utilizes the pivotal moment when Janie realizes that marriage doesn’t always mean love to show Janie's coming of age and psychological development which is used to show that love doesn't always come first. Logan Killicks was Janie's first marriage, which was brought about after Nanny (her grandmother) decided that she need to be married after she caught Janie and a young boy kissing when she was 16. After that Janie finds herself being thrown into some random marriage with some man she barely knew, and for a reason
Their Eyes Were Watching God, the author, Zora Neale Hurston, manages to give the internal events a sense of excitement, suspense, and climax usually associated with external action. These internal events include awakenings, discoveries, and changes in consciousness. Throughout the novel, the main character, Janie, hopes to find the kind of love she witnessed between the bee and the blossom on the pear tree (Hurston 11). During her journey for love she gains independence and freedom, she also finds happiness. These changes are due to the many different types of love she experienced.
Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God and Ernest J. Gaines’ A Lesson Before Dying, while completely different in terms of plot and writing style, are both prominent american literary works. The similarities that they do share are the key reasons why the novels are such enduring works. Their novels both contain a number of similar themes, impressive uses of the different figurative elements, and (arguably the most important similarity) well-written characters that are dynamic and unique. Hurston and Gaines' characters Janie and Jefferson, through their evolving relationships and the personal growth they illustrate throughout their stories, describe the necessity of adversity and human connections in order to achieve self respect.
In Their Eyes Were Watching God Zora Neale Hurston develops a contrast between the male and female genders of the time period of the story, and the male and female gender of today. Hurston wrote this novel in or about a time when women were considered simple-minded , women were disempowered by the empowered man in the relationship, and women can only gain power through marriage. But when Janie kisses Johnny Taylor, her view of men changes after seeing “a dust-bearing bee sink into the sanctum of a bloom; the thousand sister-calyxes arch to meet the love embrace and the ecstatic shiver of the tree from root to tiniest branch creaming in every blossom and frothing with delight. So this was a marriage!
Compassionate Americans John F. Kennedy said, “Ask what you can do for your country?” In order to answer President J.F. K., I would like to use Keri Wyatt Kent’s words. She said in her book “Simple Compassion,” that to make a difference in our country we need to cut back on our spending. Thus, the Americans’ way of living are frugal. It is justified for the following reasons.