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Their Eyes Were Watching God Feminist Analysis

Decent Essays

Zora Neale Hurston’s novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, revolves around Janie Crawford, a young African-American woman who lives with her grandmother. Her grandmother came from a distressing past of slavery and she does not want the same for Janie. Her conception of freedom is living a wealthy life without any complications, and so she forces Janie to marry a rich old man named Logan Killicks. She is depressed by this loveless marriage and looks out of her door to hope for new things. When the aspiring Joe Starks comes along he charms Janie with his personality and ambition, and when he asks her to leave with him, “Janie pulled back a long time because he did not represent sun-up and pollen blooming trees, but he spoke for far horizon. He …show more content…

Nor does she form the strong female and racial bonds that black feminists have deemed necessary in their definition of an ideologically correct literature”(Jordan 115). Jordan remains apprehensive about the feminist qualities of the novel and whether it really applies to African-American women. “The novel fails to meet several of the criteria defined by black feminist criticism”(Jordan 115). In her, article Jordan claims that Janie isn’t capable of living individually or functioning without a male. One wouldn’t disagree with this because of Janie’s sticky and innocent behavior that covers all the dependence she shows on the men, which in turn leads to one judging the male characters as rude or violent. “Nanny’s slaps help persuade her[Janie] to marry Logan; Jody’s slaps encourage her to separate her internal and external lives in order to survive”(Kubitschek 112). Janie is easily persuaded by the rules the men or women make in her life, she follows the rules and when a controversy takes place, she acts against the characters debating whether or not she actually knows how to protect herself without following the opponents

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