Janie in Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

1052 Words3 Pages

Thus, their inability to relate to her does not come from hatred but form their upbringing or skepticism. Janie’s story (profoundly economic in emphasis, as Houston Baker has argued) focuses on three representative husbands (Newman, Oct., 2003). Although the focal point of Their Eyes Were Watching God correlates with Janie’s relationship with her three husbands and other people. It is the main and primary idea of Janie’s search for divine clarification and a strong sense of her own identity. Janie is alone as seen in the beginning and the ending of the story.
The novel is not a story of Janie’s quest for love but rather than her quest for sense of security and independence. Janie’s improvement has been charted along the way as she studies the use of language and discovering her relationship to her own voice. At the end of her journey, Janie is stronger and more confident then she was when returns to Eatonville. As a young girl, Janie has some romantic bones in her body (Shmoop Editorial Team). Her magical experience underneath a blossoming pear tree has a profound effect on her; she associates the pollination of pear tree blossoms with the epitome of a romantic experience (Shmoop Editorial Team). When we first see Janie, she is unsure of herself or how she wants to live. Janie’s revelation under the blossoming pear tree initiates her quest when shares her story with Pheoby. After seeing the pear tree, Janie is immediately inspired to seek love, which leads to her first kiss and lifetime searching for true love (Shmoop Editorial Team).
Janie’s burning desire to achieve for this type of love is a mutuality that produces togetherness with the world, but she’s unsure how to ensure that her goal is met. From the pear-tree incident o...

... middle of paper ...

...nticized readings of it as a feminist triumph tale (Newman, Oct., 2003). Thus, Janie’s analysis of the novel’s attitude toward language when she tells Pheoby that talking “don’t amount tuh uh hill uh beans” if it isn’t connected to actual experience. Triumphalism has itself been located within a dubious rhetoric of status (Newman, Oct., 2003).

Work Cited
"Dis ain't Gimme, Florida": Zora Neale Hurston's "Their Eyes Were Watching God"
Author(s): Judie Newman Source: The Modern Language Review, Vol. 98, No. 4 (Oct., 2003), pp. 817-826
Published by: Modern Humanities Research
AssociationStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3737926 .Accessed: 21/04/2014 10:27Your
Shmoop Editorial Team. "Janie Crawford in Their Eyes Were Watching God" Shmoop University, Inc. 11 November 2008. http://www.shmoop.com/eyes-were-watching-god/janie-crawford.html (accessed April 21, 2014).

Open Document