Ecocritical Roles In Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God

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“Their Eyes Were Watching God” was published in 1937 in a pre-war, democratic United States. Ecocritical concerns were not raised for the environment, let alone in literature. The novel follows the life of Janie Crawford Killicks Starks Woods, set in different parts of Florida at the end of the 19th century. The reader witnesses all the events of Janie’s life through a hypothetical story, is an oral tale while in reality it is not. We will listen to another main voice in account, someone who speaks the unconsciousness of the characters: Hurston as the narrator, gives life to Janie’s thoughts when she is forbidden to speak by her second husband and by her own self. Since she is too young and naïve to be able to truly articulate her mind. Hurston, using her role as speaking voice, spreads …show more content…

However that tree is also the image of the result of her life as a slave, being the place where she is forced to hide her daughter in order not to have her sold away and chance for the future while the other becomes a divine symbol of happiness and love. The teachings about the futility of love are the most caring gesture she could think of. Janie’s tree is a whole different matter. She has lounged under a pear tree for three days, every spare minute she had from her chores. She has been sitting there “ever since the first tiny bloom had opened ”, ever since nature has decided to bring back life to the tree in springtime. Unlike her grandmother, her tree signs the beginning of her journey while putting an end to her relation with her only parental figure. She feels the weight of her own personal mission now: she wants to solve the mystery Nature had called her to gaze upon, to find her own bee and blossom to fulfill her life’s dream of a perfect

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