Their Eyes Were Watching God Analysis

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The chances are that if you are an American, you are searching for an identity. Ours is a nation made up of people from somewhere else. These other places are ethnic, religious, cultural, and social. Even though they may be American citizens, the characters or speaker in Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates, and “Let America be America Again” by Langston Hughes are all on journeys to find themselves, to determine where they fit in their worlds. They raise questions less about how to be an American and more about how “to be” in America. I include myself on this journey.
Janie from Their Eyes Were Watching God shows us that identity is not a prize to win or a goal to accomplish, but a journey to take. She progresses from being seen as a black wife ruled by someone else, to an independent person unhindered by gender or race. Although a more obvious objective of hers is to find true love in someone else, in doing so she is seeking herself as an individual. A specific point in time marks the beginning of …show more content…

Throughout high school I have learned that “The [American] Dream” (11, Coates) is not “the dream it used to be” (2, Hughes) as the speaker in Langston Hughes’ “Let America Be America Again” so eloquently put it. I think that Coates and Hughes would be in agreement that The Dream is long gone in today’s America. There is no “freedom in this ‘homeland of the free’” (16, Hughes). This false promise is like when someone tells you they love you, but one day you find out he never did. Your mind, body, and soul spent all your time building a life on counterfeit. The speaker of the poem diligently highlights this deception when he explains how “equality is in the air we

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