How does hurston use nature as a metaphor




















Similarly, the horizon represents the far-off mystery of the natural world, with which she longs to connect. The hurricane represents the destructive fury of nature. As such, it functions as the opposite of the pear tree and horizon imagery: whereas the pear tree and horizon stand for beauty and pleasure, the hurricane demonstrates how chaotic and capricious the world can be.

The hurricane makes the characters question who they are and what their place in the universe is. Its impersonal nature—it is simply a force of pure destruction, lacking consciousness and conscience—makes the characters wonder what sort of world they live in, whether God cares about them at all, and whether they are fundamentally in conflict with the world around them. In the face of the hurricane, Janie and the other characters wonder how they can possibly survive in a world filled with such chaos and pain.

SparkTeach Teacher's Handbook. What does the title mean? Why is the porch important? Graham, M. Cambridge Companion to African American Novel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Harper, P. Huggins, N. Voices from the Harlem Renaissance. New York: Oxford University Press. Hurston, Z. Their Eyes Were Watching God. New York: Perennial Classics. Jones, Sh. New York: Facts on File. Kaplan, E. Karanja, A. New York: Peter Lang Publishing.

One of the most powerful metaphors in the novel is the blossoming pear tree. Janie is enchanted by the beautiful tree in Nanny's backyard. As she climbs the tree and sits in its branches, Janie realizes the meaning of true love when she sees the marriage of the bees to the blossoms in the pear tree. The blossoming pear tree symbolizes Janie's emerging womanhood. Janie's image of love, as she saw it in the pear tree, causes her to embark on her lifelong search for love.

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