Eyes Ess

641 Words2 Pages

Zora Neale Hurston wrote Their Eyes Were Watching God, which was set in 1930 during the time when women’s right were starting to have a lot of talk. Hurston showed an image of everything being ok, and you can have freedom, you can have dreams, and you can do what you want when you want. But in reality this was not true, women had to fight to get what they wanted and even then they still were cut short, treated like mules and pushed aside. There only job was to stay at home and be a good housewife and never speak out of line. The husband was the bread maker and he had the right to do what he thought was best because, he was the alpha male, and if their wives tried to mess with that or change that all they had to do was give them a not so gentle reminder of who they were. Hurston wrote a book about a young woman named Janie who was trying to find her way in society. Through the book Janie is trying to figure out who she is and where she belongs. Janie was a strong independent black women who always had a man. When she was younger she was raised by Nanny, who is portrayed as someone who is loving and cares for Janie very much and would do anything to make sure that Janie is protected. Altough Nanny is portrayed as a “feminist male-basher”. She never got married she lived by herself with Janie, Nanny loves materialized things such as land, status, and money. This is why Nanny marries Janie off to an older man (Logan Kellacks) to protect her. But all Janie wants to do is go on adventures, be free have dreams, be able to do things and live her life the way she wants to not the way Nanny wants or even a husband wants. Janie is a very wealthy women, and she doesn’t do anything about it. Money is just an object to Janie... ... middle of paper ... ...re stuck at home being told what they could and couldn’t do. Hurston paints a very interesting picture of what 1930 was for women. But in the end the only thing that was true for both worlds was that the women was the mule for the husband always doing what she was told and never talking back in fear of being beaten. Works Cited Hurston, Zora Neale. Their Eyes Were Watching God. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1990. Print. Korobkin, Laura H. "Legal narratives of self-defense and self-effacement in 'Their Eyes Were Watching God.'(Critical Essay)." Studies in American Fiction 31.1 (2003): 3+. Literature Resource Center. Web. 30 Jan. 2014. Loyola L.A. International and Comparative Law Journal 12 (1990), 82143, and Jennifer M. Scherer and Rita J. Simon, Euthanasia and the Right to Die: A Comparative View, (New York: Rowman and Littlefield, 1999), 13-17.

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