In the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, there are many lessons
on a person's search for identity. Janie's search for identity throughout this book is
very visible. It has to do with her search for a name, and freedom for herself. As she
goes through life her search takes many turns for the worse and a few for the better, but
in the end she finds her true identity. Through her marriages with Logan, Joe, then Tea
Cake she figures out what is for her and how she wants to live. So in the end, she is
where she wants to be.
In Janie's early life she lived with her grandmother, Nanny. Nanny and Janie were
pretty well off and had the privilege to live in the yard of white folks. While Janie
was growing up she played with the white children. While she was in this stage, she was
faced with much criticism and was called many names, so many that everyone started
calling her alphabet, "'cause so many people had done named me different names." Soon
she started piecing together what she knew of her odd identity. Then one day she saw
herself in a photograph and noticed that she looked different, that she had dark skin,
and she said, "before Ah seen de picture Ah thought Ah wuz just like de rest." From this
point, Janie fell into somewhat of a downward spiral, setting her off of the path toward
finding her own identity in society. Finally when she was older Nanny saw her doing
somethings under the pear tree that she thought were unacceptable. Nanny quickly
arranged a marriage between Janie and a well-off local man, Logan Killicks. In this
marriage Janie resisted. She felt as if she was losing her freedom was well as her
identity, she wasn't Janie anymore she was now Mrs. Logan Killicks, and she was somewhat
obligated to do what he wanted. Not long into this marriage, Janie has had enough, and
when the chance to go away with a smooth, romantic man, she takes the chance.
The man Janie left Logan for was named Joe Starks. Joe was a smart man who started his
own town, Eatonville. In the beginning of her relationship with, Joe, she felt loved,
something she never really felt while she had been with Logan. At first, when she ran
away with Joe, she felt as if she was finding her new identity, but all there was for her
to find was a great maze not always heading her toward her new identity. While she was
with Joe she felt as if she had a position of subservience to Joe, he did not see her as
an equal. When Joe was nominated to be mayor, and the people wanted to hear from Mrs.
Mayor Starks, Joe said, "mah wife don't know nothin' 'bout speech-makin'." What he was
saying was that Janie wasn't there for her smarts, she was there to be his wife, to beat
for the show, to run the store and the post office, and most of all to be Mrs. Mayor
Starks. Throughout this marriage Janie as though she was losing more and more of her
identity and freedom in this marriage. By the end of the marriage, she did not have her
kitchen and house work that she loved to do, and she had lost her name.
After the timely demise of Joe, another man came into Janie's life, Vergible Woods,
a.k.a. Tea Cake. He was an unpretentious man without the status of high class, unlike
Logan and Joe. He was just what Janie had wanted. Tea Cake gave Janie the freedom to do
whatever she wanted. He allowed her to play checkers and talk to whom ever she wanted.
The name issue arose again in this relationship. When Janie was with Tea Cake most of
the people called her "Janie." By this time she had finally found her identity. She was
just an average person who wanted freedom and who didn't always like having complete
security. In her marriage to Tea Cake, Janie finally had peace and love. She wanted to
do most of whatever Tea Cake was doing. She did not feel any obligation to work with Tea
Cake, she just wanted to. So when she returned to Eatonville in her overalls, she had
inside of her, true inner happiness and knowledge of her identity.
In this novel, Zora Neale Hurston shows many points on her view of a woman's place in
America in the twentieth century. One of the points that she makes is that women need to
search for their independent identity. That women should not settle for a simple life of
being put down and controlled by men. If women are dissatisfied in a marriage they need
to move on toward the things that do satisfy them. She is also stating that women in the
twentieth century can hold their own in life. They should become equals of men in work,
because they are not the stupid weaklings that should be forced to fill a roll of
subservience to men. Finally her last comment about women's place in America in the
twentieth century is that women can be independent and don't have to lose their identity
when they get married.
Janie had a hard time finding her identity. Through her childhood, her marriage to
Logan, then Joe, and then finally Tea Cake, Janie has always hoped to have an identity
independent of anyone else. Hurston's model for twentieth century women is a very
defined model. One which holds freedom, an identity, and an equal level of stature to
men, all of which Janie strived to have. Overall Janie's end identity is one that many
women in the twentieth century strive to behold.
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