Thursday, May 30, 2019

Female Spirituality and Sexuality Explored Through Zora Neale Hurston’s

Zora Neale Hurston, while living in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, was researching voodoo on the most scholarly level. She was studying with Haitis most well known hougans and mambos, or priests and priestesses. At this time she was gathering knowledge about voodoo so she could keep the text, Tell My Horse. Also, at this same time Hurston had finished writing, Their Eyes Were Watching God in only seven short weeks. A close see of this novel provides the reader with a relationship between voodoo and the text. Hurston not only explores female spirituality and sexuality in, Their Eyes Were Watching God, but weaves the dickens together revealing that voodoo culture plays an important role within the novel especially in the comparisons between the voodoo goddess Erzulie and the texts main character Janie Crawford.Hurston exploits the troupe in which Janie Crawford lives in. Hers is a society in which she is not allowed to live freely and express herself freely. She is suppressed in her societ y because she is a woman and because she is African-American. Hurston understands this oppression and she uncovers the fair play on the status of black females at this time. There were no powerful roles available to them in their American culture or in their African-American culture. Women were looked down on and they were not seen as potentially strong spiritual and sexual people. Hurston opens the door for her protagonist, Janie Crawford, to create a more substantial and empowering life for herself after the many an(prenominal) hardships she faces. She leads her down a path to self-determination and this path is embodied by the spirituality of voodoo. The old, old mysticism of the world in African terms...a religion of universe and life (Tell My Horse 376).This i... ...oodoo, which stands in the novel to tie in the value of self-discovery is integral to the storys comparisons between Janie and Erzulie. Voodoo is believed to have played a shapely role in the Haitian revolution in which Haiti won its independence from France. The integration of voodoo imagery and symbolism throughout, Their Eyes Were Watching God, reflects Hurstons belief that self-discovery for African-American women lies not in their male dominated society, but rather in their understanding of their own sexual and spiritual strength. Hurston achieves this idea greatly by linking the female goddess Erzulie with Janie Crawford. Works CitedTell My Horse. 1938. rptd. in Hurston Folklore, Memoirs and Other Writings. ed. Cheryl A Wall. New York Library of America, 1995. 269-555.Their Eyes Were Watching God. 1937. New York Harper & Row, 1990.

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