RACIAL AND SEXUAL HARASSMENT DEPICTED IN “THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD”

Authors

  • Gulnora Abdirakhmonova Literature faculty of Uzbekistan state of world languages university

Keywords:

racial issues , sexuality , gender roles ,unsuccessful marriage ,mixed race, fatality of love , same fate of generation

Abstract

Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God has garnered mixed reviews for its portrayal of the African American struggle. While some of her male contemporaries viewed the novel as an oversimplification of racial issues, a closer examination of the text reveals otherwise. This abstract delves into Hurston’s nuanced depiction of the despair faced not only by African Americans, but also by women. Hurston adeptly captures the complexities of race, sexuality and gender without resorting to the anger and hostility found in the works of many of her male African American peers, including Richard Wright. By portraying the female protagonist’s skin color, language, and character, Hurston creates an authentic image of African American women in the early 1900s. Her use of African American vernacular gives Janie Crawford a distinct voice, despite society’s efforts to silence her. Through an analysis of the context, narrative, and language, the work argues that Their Eyes Were Watching God is not simply a tragic love story, but a masterful representation of race, gender, sexuality and class issues in America during that time period.

References

Hurston, Zora Neale. (1978). There Eyes Were Watching God. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.

Mcgowan, Todd. (2009). On Liberation and Domination in Harold Bloom. Bloom’s Guides to Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes are Watching God. New York: Infobase publishing, 51-59.

Zhao, Lihua & Shi Jian. (2007, Autumn). Internalized-racism and Subjectivity Construction: the Psychological Damage of Racism and Its Consequence in African-Americans as Reflected in Their Eyes Were Watching God. Fudan Forum of Foreign Languages and Literature, 33-39.

Davie, S. (1993, May). Free Mules, Talking Buzzards, and Cracked Plates: The Politics of Dislocation in Their Eyes were Watching God. PMLA, 108 (3),446-459

Gates. H. (2000). Zora Neale Hurston and the Speakerly Text. In C. Wall (Ed.), Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God: A Casebook(pp. 59-116). New York: Oxford University Press.

Lester, N.(1999).UnderstandingZora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God. London: Greenwood Press.

Wolff, M. (1982). Listening and Living: Reading and Experience in Their Eyes Were Watching God. Black American Literature Forum, 16 (1), 218-229.

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Published

2023-04-27

How to Cite

Abdirakhmonova, G. (2023). RACIAL AND SEXUAL HARASSMENT DEPICTED IN “THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD”. Educational Research in Universal Sciences, 2(2 SPECIAL), 249–253. Retrieved from http://erus.uz/index.php/er/article/view/1997