Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Monday, December 15, 2014
Blog #17: Their Eyes Were Watching God Essay, Draft 1
In Zora Neal Hurston’s frame
narrative Their Eyes Were Watching God,
Hurston tells the coming-of-age story of Janie as she experiences failures in
seeking true love due to falling victim to oppression and male dominance in her
first two marriages, and ultimately realizing the futility in trying to find
love in a man through coming to terms with the importance of self-love and having
the strength to live alone contently. Ironically, Janie’s pivotal moment in
which she finds the will to be a strong and independent woman is after the death
of her husband Joe Starks; though she does not yet attain her dream of true
love with Tea Cake, she is freed from coercion from men and finds autonomy as
an individual.
Joe’s death and Janie’s experience of widowhood prompt her own discovery of power and independence as a woman. It is evident that Janie’s beauty represents a certain kind of power that Joe feels threatened by, which justifies his reason behind insisting that Janie hide her beautiful hair. The Caucasian quality of Janie’s hair also adds the power that it possesses. Because Joe sought a life of excess and wealth that would be comparable to a white man, Janie’s hair reinforces his racial insecurity, as other men also seem drawn to the power of its allure. Hurston conveys Janie’s liberation after Joe’s death as “she [Janie] tore off the kerchief from her head and let down her plentiful hair. The weight, the length the glory was there” (Hurston, 87). Janie recognizes that she is no longer a “young girl”, but she realizes that she has transformed into a “handsome woman”. The image of a “handsome woman” is eloquent and mature, which contrasts the pretty and innocence girl that is longer a part of Janie. Notably, the word “handsome” also connotes an appearance that demonstrates strength, enhancing Janie’s transition.
The discovery of self-esteem in being a woman is crucial for Janie’s maturity and self-empowerment. Her discovery of the significance of womanhood opposes Nanny’s view; she reveals her hatred towards her grandmother’s pessimistic influence towards her perception of love. The dream that Janie chases is embodied by the image of the horizon, Nanny taints that image as Hurston describes, “Here Nanny had taken the biggest thing God ever made, the horizon…and pinched it in to such a little bit of a thing that she could tie it about her granddaughter’s neck tight enough to choke her” (Hurston, 89). Janie resents her Nanny’s distorted outlook on the purpose of marriage and love because Nanny only viewed marriage to be a form of security for women; she states, “de [black] woman is de mule uh de world so fur as Ah can see”. Nanny believes that finding a man with security that can support a woman is the most optimal solution and the only purpose of marriage. As Janie finds the muscle in the beauty of womanhood, she realizes that she detests Joe and Nanny’s traditional view that the role of the wife is confined to being an object of display, a position under the husband. Joe tells Janie, “A pretty doll-baby lak you is made to sit on de front porch and rock and fan yo’self and eat p’taters dat other folks plant just special for you” (Hurston, 29). After experiencing the failure of her marriage with Joe, however, Janie alters her hopes in what the horizon can offer her.
Janie’s realization of the value of freedom in womanhood over all else leads her to discover a simple, yet fulfilling life on the muck with Tea Cake. She is free to leave her hair down, wear overalls, and speak her mind in the Everglades; she pities her friends in Eatonville and recognizes her liberation, stating that “Only here, she could listen and laugh and even talk some herself if she wanted to” (Hurston, 134). Her discovery of womanly freedom proves to be pivotal in that it evidently allows her to experience self-actualization through the means of a true and boundless love. Thus, the death of Janie’s husband Joe is what allows her to discover the determination to be independent, and consequently the exquisiteness in having the ability to share an equal, compromising love with Tea Cake, which is also a perpetual love as Janie comes to terms with the eventual loss of Tea Cake.
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Blog #16: Fish Bowl Discussion and "Tea Cake" Extra Credit
“Tea Cake” Extra
Credit Food Explanation
I made sugar cookies cut into star shapes and decorated with
yellow icing and gold sprinkles. The yellow icing is analogous to Matt Bonner’s
skinny yellow mule in Their Eyes Were Watching
God. Hence, the yellow symbolizes burden, as the yellow mule is the beast
of burden just as the black woman is in the society of the book. The yellow mule
and the black woman must bear the extra weight as they support both the white
man’s burden and the black man’s burden. The white man’s burden is pushed upon
Janie through Joe Starks and the black man’s burden is pushed upon Janie
through Logan Killicks. The gold on the icing symbolizes the money, power,
glory, and excess that Joe seeks, forcing Janie to live her life as the
voiceless wife of the mayor. The yellow alluding to the yellow mule (that
exists in other examples of African folkloric culture) symbolizes the menial
labor that Logan forces Janie to do, putting her down to the level of an
animal, to the level of the yellow mule. The star that holds all of this together
represents authority, particularly men’s power over women.
Star Shaped Sugar Cookie Recipe
Total Time: 65 min
Prep: 20 min
Cook: 45 min
Yield: 22 cookies
Ingredients:
- 2 stick of Pillsbury sugar cookie dough, keep it refrigerated prior to use
- 2 sheets of wax paper (approximately 12 x 24 inches for each sheet)
- 1 small bottle of gold sugar for sprinkling (about 1/4 teaspoon per cookie)
- 1 small bottle of gold pearl sugar for cookie decoration (about 6-10 beads per cookie)
- 6 tablespoons of all-purpose flour
- 1 wooden rolling pin
- 1 star shaped cookie cutter
- 1 tube of yellow icing
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
Put a non-stick piece of aluminum foil in a baking pan (similar
size to the baking pan) for later use.
Cut Pillsbury sugar cookie dough into ½ inch thick pieces; put them on wax paper.
Cut Pillsbury sugar cookie dough into ½ inch thick pieces; put them on wax paper.
Sprinkle some flour on the wax paper, dust the flour on
the bottom and top of a cookie dough piece, and slowly press the cookie dough piece
by using a wooden rolling pin until it forms approximately a round shape.
Carefully transfer it to a baking pan with a sheet of non-stick aluminum foil. Place
6 pieces of cookie dough in a baking pan per batch and keep them ~2 inches
apart. Bake the cookies for 14 minutes until the cookies are just barely
turning brown. After the cookies are out of the oven, immediately use a star
cookie cutter to firmly cut the baked cookies while they are hot and soft. Allow them to cool before removing the edges around the cookies. Repeat the process and bake
multiple batches of cookies, if needed.
Put all the star cookies on a sheet of wax paper, cut the
yellow icing tube and squeeze the icing onto the center of the star cookies;
use a knife to evenly spread the yellow icing onto the top of the cookie. Dust
the gold sugar sprinkles on top of the icing. Enjoy!
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