Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Hurston :: essays research papers
Zora Neal Hurston was the daughter of a Baptist Preacher born in Alabama on January 7, 1891 only 26 years after slavery was abolished. When she was ternary her father moved their family to Eatonville Florida. Eatonville was the first incorporated shadowy community in America, a place that Zora held as the black utopia. Zora was able to receive an education and realize her B.A. in Anthropology from Columbia University in 1928 (Zora). Her father was the mayor of Eatonville which allotted her opportunities that many other blacks did not have, but that is not to say that being the daughter of a black mayor from a black town made things easy for her. Zora eventually became an accomplished novelist and folklorist as well as an authority on black culture from the Harlem Renaissance (Zora). Her greatest novel was that of Their Eyes Are Watching God, however when the book was released in 1937 it was criticized by the black community as strike downplaying the hardships that blacks of that clock time had to endure at the hands of whites subsequently the book was shelved and forgotten until the 1970s. Today because of a revival of her novel it is considered to be a modern literary command (Verma). The town that Zora grew up in was a rural black community. Because her interaction with whites was very limited she did not have the constant contrast or acquaintance of being a minority. As far as she was concerned she was no different, or at least she held the same value as everyone else. It was not until she was send to school in Jacksonville Florida that she actually realized her diversity, or as she put in her short story To be Colored Me, the very day that I became colored (Hurston). When she arrived in Jacksonville it was the first time that she had such a great contrast of her color to that of the larger of society. I was not Zora of Orange County any much I was now a little colored girl. I found it out in certain ways, in my heart as well as in the mirror (Hurst on). Zora was lucky however to have grown up in an all black community where she was not harassed for her color and looked down upon by others. As stated above she was not even aware of her color until she went to a major city where the majority of the population was white.
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