Janie, in Zora Neale Hurston's, Their Eyes Were Watching God, changed throughout the course of the three major stages of her life.

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Fernando Moura                                                                       Ms Williams

E band                                                                              December 8, 2002

                  English Essay: Their Eyes Were watching God   <Revised>

        Janie, in Zora Neale Hurston’s, Their Eyes Were Watching God, changed throughout the course of the three major stages of her life.  In each of her three marriages, Janie, experienced both oppression and freedom through her interactions with her husbands. Her transition from different towns also helped her discover herself, and explore her options in society as a black woman. Literary critic, Claire Crabtree, wrote that, “the three marriages and the three communities in which Janie moves represent increasingly wide circles of experience and opportunities for expression of personal choice.”  In each of her marriages, Janie undergoes a moment of intimidation of her husband’s assertive and dominant character, to a moment of anger and retaliation from all of the moments that she had held back. The only exception is in her last marriage with Vergible (Tea Cake) Woods, whom she unwillingly killed and remained involved with after doing so. Each of her phases follow the same basic sequence. In the beginning, she feels physically and verbally oppressed by her husband, then, she comes to a realization of her mistreatment, and then she finally acts upon it by retaliating in a gruesomely honest way, presumptuously stating the sad truth. By this point, all of her stresses and angers towards her husband have built up, and, disregarding everything that her grandmother told her about keeping quiet with her husbands, she blew up. Janie knew that she deserved the best. She dreamed of being treated like the smart woman that she was, and for once, not be deprived of her intelligence, just because she was a woman.  This is why Janie retaliated against her husbands, directly or indirectly, after a long time of passiveness towards them, because she realized that what she was living with them, was not her dream.

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        Janie was in the search of her dream as well as her personal voice, and she did not want to waste her time with something that she did not want. If she knew that at the moment something was in her way, detaining her from reaching her goals, she set out to do whatever it was that she had to do to free herself from this obstacle; “What was she loosing so much time for? A feeling of sudden newness came over her. Janie hurried out of the front gate and turned south. Even if Joe was not there waiting ...

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