Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston — book cover

Book details

Their Eyes Were Watching God

by Zora Neale Hurston

1937

About the book

Janie Crawford returns to Eatonville, Florida, and recounts her life to her friend Pheoby Watson. The narrative follows Janie’s transition from a teenage girl forced into a marriage with an older farmer to her role as the mayor’s wife in an all-Black township. She eventually abandons social status for Tea Cake, a younger laborer, moving to the Everglades to pick beans. The story chronicles Janie’s search for personal identity through these relationships, culminating in a hurricane that forces her to kill her lover in self-defense.

Readers interested in the intersection of Black Southern history and gender dynamics study this text for its use of African American Vernacular English and its depiction of female autonomy within a patriarchal society. It offers a specific look at early twentieth-century class structures and the psychological weight of communal judgment. A reader walks away with a clear understanding of how an individual negotiates their own interior landscape against the expectations of their neighbors and the constraints of rural poverty.

Details

Published
1937
Language
EN