Perhaps the most widely read work of African American literature, “Their Eyes Were Watching God” is the story of an uncompromising love in the American South, told through the singular voice of Zora Neale Hurston.
Zora Neale Hurston was a novelist, anthropologist, playwright, stage director, and essayist. She was born in Alabama in 1891 and is considered one of the leading figures of the Harlem Renaissance movement. The award-winning author of The Color Purple, Alice Walker, rediscovered her work, and since then Hurston has been regarded as one of the most vivid and inventive voices in American literature.
Perceptive and iconoclastic, a trailblazing activist, she was adored by readers of her work, and respected and admired by writers such as Maya Angelou, Zadie Smith, and Paul Beatty. Toni Morrison considered her one of the greatest writers of our time.
Her name stood out for her views on atheism and her belief in the social integration of Black and white communities. Although her contribution to the Harlem Renaissance was significant, her work was largely neglected during her lifetime. It was only after an essay by Alice Walker in the 1970s that she gained renewed attention.
Their Eyes Were Watching God became one of the most widely read works of African American literature. It is regarded as the defining masterpiece of an undervalued writer—an emblematic work about free women who do not need the mercy or pity of others.
Her major works include Mules and Men (1935), an anthology of African American folklore from northern Florida, and Voodoo and Life in Haiti and Jamaica (1938), a study of rituals in Jamaica and Haiti. She was married three times and died in 1960 in Fort Pierce, Florida.
When sixteen-year-old Janie is caught exchanging kisses with a boy, her grandmother hastily marries her off to a sixty-year-old landowner. But Janie refuses to surrender. Restless and determined, she sets out in search of her own identity and, through joy and sorrow alike, learns what love truly means and ultimately comes to terms with herself.
When Their Eyes Were Watching God was first published in 1937, its portrayal of a proud, independent Black woman was ignored or dismissed by many male critics.
Out of print for nearly forty years, the novel was republished in 1978 and has since come to be regarded as the most widely read work of African American literature.
Janie Crawford speaks with striking directness about her life, her marriages, and her desire not to live either as a beast of burden or as a decorative accessory beside a man.
She declares that she pursued two things in life: first, to go out into the world and face life on her own; and second, to seek happiness — something far from simple or easy.
Alice Walker, author of The Color Purple, has said that there is no greater book for her than this one.