Zora Neale Hurston was a woman before her time, and when she passed away in 1960, her works had largely gone unnoticed. She died in relative obscurity. However, author Alice Walker saw the important voice that Hurston’s writing gave to the African American community and revived Hurston’s writings, where at last, they finally received the attention they deserve.
Their Eyes Were Watching God is Hurston’s best-known work, a novel that centers around Janie, a poor black girl raised in Florida by her grandmother, who is always searching for something more. Her struggle with who she wants to be versus who others expect her to be is a central conflict throughout the novel. In addition to Janie’s journey to self-realization, the novel examines other important themes, including defining gender roles, the difference between love and marriage, silence, and the tension created by a social hierarchy within the African American community itself.
The Harlem Renaissance was an important African American flowering of art, literature, and music in Harlem, New York from 1919 to the mid 1930s. This intellectual and artistic movement gave a new sense of cultural identity to African American writers and thinkers. It also served to lay the foundation for the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. It included several important writers, including Langston Hughes, Jessie Redmon Fauset, Alain Locke, Jean Toomer, Rudolf Fisher, Nella Larsen, and Zora Neale Hurston. Important characteristics of Harlem Renaissance literature include:
If students get stuck, it helps to sound it out. There are also audio readings on the internet of the novel - some students may also find it more helpful to listen along with the reading.
Engage students in pairs or small groups to analyze Janie or another key character together. Collaboration boosts engagement and critical thinking!
Provide students with a list of major and minor characters. Let groups choose or assign characters to ensure every key figure is explored. This gives students ownership and variety!
Share prompts like: What motivates this character? How do they change? Encourage groups to use specific evidence from the text. Guiding questions keep students focused and foster meaningful discussion!
Offer options such as storyboards, short skits, posters, or digital slides. Creative presentations help solidify learning and make classroom analysis fun! Student choice increases buy-in.
After presentations, lead a discussion on similarities and differences among characters. This helps students connect themes and deepen their understanding of the novel’s messages!
"Sus ojos estaban observando a Dios" es una novela de Zora Neale Hurston que sigue a Janie Crawford en su viaje hacia el autodescubrimiento y la independencia, explorando temas como el amor, el matrimonio, los roles de género y la jerarquía social en la comunidad afroamericana.
Comienza discutiendo el Renacimiento de Harlem y el impacto de Zora Neale Hurston. Luego, utiliza preguntas esenciales y actividades para involucrar a los estudiantes con los temas de la novela y el uso del dialecto ocular en el diálogo.
La novela aborda la identidad propia, la diferencia entre amor y matrimonio, roles de género, jerarquía social y la importancia del silencio en las relaciones.
Hurston usa dialecto ocular deletreando palabras fonéticamente para reflejar el habla local, como "Ah" por "Yo" y "dem" por "ellos". Esta técnica añade autenticidad y profundidad a sus personajes.
Enseñar esta novela ayuda a los estudiantes a explorar el contexto histórico, la identidad cultural y cuestiones sociales críticas mientras desarrollan empatía a través de las experiencias de Janie y el estilo narrativo único de Hurston.