“Their Eyes Were Watching God”
Dreams of Love and the Search for Identity...
This modern classic by Zora Neale Hurston follows Janie Mae Crawford on her search for love and identity. This story is an interesting mixture of condoning the domineering control of a husband and the self– discovery and independence of a woman. It is definitely an interesting read that explores many historical and current issues regarding marriage, love, and self– fulfillment.
One of the themes in this novel is the idea of finding true love. Janie searches for it for her entire life, choosing to search for her fulfillment and identity in a man rather than within herself. This attitude appears from the very beginning of the novel. When Janie was yet sixteen, Janie becomes fascinated by the pollinating of a pear tree. She compares this pear tree to marriage, and also to herself, wishing to be in bloom like the blossoms of the tree. She gives no thoughts to her own personal dreams or aspirations save to be married.
The main conflict in “Their Eyes Were Watching God” in Janie’s continued search for fulfillment. She goes two marriages, finding fulfillment in neither. At that point, readers may hope that she will have learned her lesson and attempt to become an individual content to find purpose in her own identity. However, this is not the case. But this time around, Janie finally finds the true love that she always wanted. Hurston brilliantly created the character of Tea Cake, a man who allows Janie to be an individual rather than an accessory, to be Janie’s final husband.
Although he upholds several demeaning attitudes towards women, Tea Cake is no doubt superior to Janie’s previous husbands. Hurston uses the metaphor of a mule to describe her first two marriages. Janie’s first husband horribly mistreats his mule, and while he never severely harmed Janie, it surely would have gotten to that point had Janie not left soon after the marriage began. Janie’s second husband was the mayor of the town in which they lived. He buys the mule to remove it from the abuse of its previous owner and then puts it out to pasture, never to use or care for it. These metaphors are startlingly accurate in regards to the treatment of Janie by her husbands.
Despite the many instances of debase disrespect to women in the novel and Janie’s sad inability to create her own identity as an individual, both have redeeming qualities. Janie’s second husband always forced her to wear head-rags, not wanting other men to be envious of her hair. Janie despised this order, and they became a symbol of his oppression of her. After his death, the removal of his power over Janie is beautifully symbolized when Janie burns all of the head rags. Also, at the end of the novel, Janie finally seems to come to the realization that it is okay to be an individual. She had lived her dream of finding true love, and now, after Tea Cake’s death, she comes to be at peace with her new role in life— being a self– fulfilled and independent woman.