Janie's Empowerment

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The novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston, explores the thoughts and feelings of Janie, an African American living in the United States, as she goes through various trials and hardships throughout the course of her life, during her search for a kind and loving relationship. Throughout the novel, the reader is granted an understanding of how Janie thinks and feels about each and every situation she explores and the reader is constantly informed of how Janie manages to pull through each time. The writer weaves an intriguing tale, empowering women through the example of how Janie is able to pull through and achieve her goals, despite any unforeseen circumstances impeding her progress or otherwise disrupting her goals. Throughout …show more content…

After Janie marries Joe, she learns that Joe Starks has a radically different definition of how women should be treated from her thoughts on the matter, as Joe believed that [women] don’t know nothin’ [about speeches]. [...] her place is in de home” (43). Although Janie expresses some relief at the time, due to how Joe saves her from giving a speech, the author expresses how women should not be treated in such a way through Janie’s discontent at how she was never given a chance to speak. Over the course of her marriage with Jope, Janie builds up contempt for Joe, questioning his actions regularly, and wondering why he “must be so mad at [her] for making him look small when he did it to her all the time” (81). Through Janie’s constant undermining of Joe’s actions, the author is able to show Janie’s resistance against unjust ideals, even at a time when it was considered unacceptable to do so. When the author has Janie express her feelings to Joe, Zora provides the readers with an excellent example of standing up for what is right, and to take action, even when you are not expected

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