Monday, December 2, 2019
Their Eyes Were Watching God Essays (799 words) -
  Their Eyes Were Watching God  How is love to influence our lives? Love-struck people do crazy things to  express how they care for that particular person yet it is a long and windy road  to these actions. It is down this path that experience spawns and trouble and  happiness are felt. Janie Crawford of Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were    Watching God, shows the road through the steps of her three relationships. These  relationships, though not fulfilling ones, conclude in bettering Janie's  search and understanding of life. Johnny Taylor, Janie's first kiss and  gatekeeper to her future, When Janie was sixteen, she embarked on a sexual  awakening. Johnny Taylor was a poor young man who lived in the Florida area.    Janie allowed him to kiss her over the fence. Unfortunately, Nanny saw  everything. With Nanny's horrendous background of sinful deeds done to her,  she wanted the best for Janie. As she saw the kiss, the doors of life opened for    Janie and Nanny wasn't going to have her make the same mistakes that she had.    Yet, Nanny had been impregnated under the circumstances of being a slave and  this was not the case for Janie. Nanny stated that "black women were the mules  of the world", but she didn't want Janie to be a mule. She wanted to see Janie  in a secure situation before she died, and Logan Killicks could provide that.    Janie did not want to marry Logan, but she did so because Nanny told her "that  she would eventually come to love him." Ironically, Logan wanted to force    Janie into the servitude that Nanny feared. Also, he was disappointed that Janie  never returned his affection and attraction. If he could not possess her through  love, he would possess her by demanding her submission. At heart, his actions  arose from the fear that Janie would leave him. Two months after her marriage to    Logan, Janie visited Nanny to ask when she would start loving him. Nanny berated    Janie for not appreciating Logan's wealth. Although Logan pampered Janie for a  year, he began complaining that she was spoiled. That night, Logan criticized    Janie for being spoiled and lazy. Janie voiced his deepest fears when she  suggested that she might leave him. Logan reminded her of her family's  reputation, hoping to hurt her feelings. Turning to these drastic of measures  blew Janie into a frenzy and she left with a smooth-talking gentleman that very  next day. Janie chose to leave Logan for Jody because he revived her dreams of  love in marriage. Her first marriage had taught her that marriage and love do  not go hand in hand. However, she still believed that love was the best  motivation for marriage. Jody promised that he would never turn Janie into a  common pack mule. He promised her that she would reap all the benefits of his  work. His words eerily echo Nanny's dream of respectability and financial  security for Janie. However, Janie didn't marry Jody because of these promises.    She married him because he inspired the feelings she had experienced while  sitting under the blossoming peach tree when she was sixteen and the moment her  womanhood became crystal clear. Ironically, Janie's marriage to Jody was the  very embodiment of Nanny's dreams for her. Unlike Logan, he did not make her a  pack mule. He gave her financial security and respectability. However, the  marriage was largely an unhappy union. Janie could not be herself around Jody.    Moreover, Jody still used Janie as a garbage even though he gave her wealth and  respectability. So it seems that Nanny's worst fears and her highest hopes were  realized in Janie's second marriage. It was until one afternoon in the store  that she met a lofty yet handsome young man who went, strangely enough, by the  name of Tea Cake. Tea Cake's courtship was different from that of Logan and    Jody. Janie's first marriage was more of a contract of sale between Nanny and    Logan than anything else. Janie's second marriage was an escape from the first  one. Moreover, it was based on disappointed dreams. Jody courted her by talking  about himself and his dreams. Tea Cake, on the other hand, pursued Janie with a  more romantic flair. Also, he allowed her equal footing in negotiating the terms  of their relationship. Gaining personal freedom was a two-fold process. First,  she had to be free in her private life, but she also had to free herself from  restricting social attitudes. Only then could she begin to heal the rift between  her outside self and her    
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