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Their Eyes Were Watching God 39382 Views
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Description:
Their eyes may have been watching God, but we think we know who won that staring contest.
Transcript
- 00:04
Their Eyes Were Watching God, a la Shmoop. Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching
- 00:11
God was published near the tail end of the modernist movement.
- 00:15
Is it just like all other Modernist works? Or is there something a bit different going
- 00:20
on here? Well, what the heck is a modernist work? Let’s
- 00:24
start there. Laser beams and flying cars?
Full Transcript
- 00:27
Not even close. Modernism is a literary movement that reached its peak between 1890 and 1940.
- 00:33
It’s bleak stuff for the most part, often conveying the idea that life is chaotic and
- 00:38
futile and everything must come to an end.[1]
- 00:41
These aren’t books about robotic dogs. They’re book about robotic dogs dying…
- 00:49
Or worse – robotic dogs never even existing. So on the one hand, There Eyes Were Watching
- 00:54
God fits right in among Modernist writers' search for comfort amid existential struggles.
- 01:00
Just as T.S. Eliot searched for spiritual post-war comfort in The Waste Land…
- 01:11
…Eyes combines a personal quest for love with larger historical issues like racism,
- 01:20
slavery, and the oppression of women.
- 01:23
And hurricanes. Everyone hates hurricanes. On the other hand, there’s something else
- 01:29
about modernism … it’s very… monochromatic.
- 01:33
You see… modernism is mostly populated with… white males. Zora Neale Hurston is neither.
- 01:40
Janie’s problems, as a black woman, don’t fall under the category of Stuff White People
- 01:46
Like.
- 01:47
They don’t even fall under the category of Stuff White People in the 1920s Cared About.
- 01:54
The stuffy modernists were more renaissance than Harlem Renaissance.
- 02:03
In that sense, Janie’s story isn’t the same as Ezra Pound’s, Eliot’s, or Thomas
- 02:08
Hardy’s.
- 02:09
Eliot was too busy cramming as many confusing words as possible into The Waste Land to be
- 02:13
bothered with race relations and gender oppression.
- 02:20
And Pound and Hardy were probably shopping for sweater vests.
- 02:26
Or maybe we just need a different perspective. Perhaps the narrow lens of modernism isn’t
- 02:31
the right way to look at this novel.
- 02:33
Hurston wasn't just trying to overcome spiritual emptiness… she was trying to overcome the
- 02:38
double-oppression of being black and being a woman in the early twentieth century.
- 02:43
These were issues that no one who wasn’t black and female cared about, so it was quite
- 02:49
a weight on her shoulders.
- 02:53
She might have been a modernist, but at the same time, she was challenging the modern
- 02:57
emphasis placed on white men and white male problems.
- 03:01
So is this book like all other modernist works because it deals with depressing existential
- 03:06
conflicts?
- 03:07
Or is it in a different category because it discusses problems that your typical white
- 03:11
male modernist couldn’t care less about?
- 03:13
Or is Hurston a modernist who is challenging other modernists?
- 03:17
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
- 03:18
[1]I'm sure this is 100% accurate—or at least it obscures some of what's really important
- 03:22
about Modernism.
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