Introduction
Zora Neale Hurston’s novel Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937) presents Janie Crawford’s three marriages as a sequence through which conventional expectations of women—obedience, economic dependence, and silence—are progressively questioned. This essay examines how each relationship with Logan Killicks, Joe Starks, and Tea Cake forces Janie to confront and ultimately reject these norms. The analysis draws on close reading of the text to show that Hurston portrays Janie’s growth as gradual and uneven rather than linear, reflecting the limited options available to Black women in the early twentieth-century American South. The discussion remains within the scope of AP Lang concerns with rhetorical choices, voice, and character development.
Logan Killicks: Economic Security without Emotional Fulfilment
Janie’s first marriage is arranged by her grandmother Nanny, who equates security with respectability. Logan owns land and a mule; Janie is expected to work alongside him. Hurston signals the absence of romantic connection through contrasting imagery: the pear tree that symbolises Janie’s earlier vision of love is never mentioned again once the marriage begins. Instead, Logan’s speech is functional and commanding (“You ain’t got no particular place. It’s wherever Ah need yuh”). Janie’s eventual departure demonstrates an early refusal to accept labour and silence as the price of protection. The episode establishes that material stability alone does not satisfy Janie’s desire for reciprocal partnership, a theme that recurs in the subsequent relationships.
Joe Starks: Public Status and Private Subordination
Joe Starks offers Janie social elevation in Eatonville, yet the marriage reproduces patriarchal control under the guise of progress. Joe’s insistence that Janie wear a head-rag and remain behind the store counter illustrates how middle-class respectability can restrict women’s autonomy more subtly than physical labour. Hurston’s use of free indirect discourse reveals Janie’s growing internal resistance; although she remains outwardly compliant for years, the narrative voice increasingly registers her unspoken thoughts. When Janie publicly retorts that Joe “look[s] like the change of life,” the moment marks the collapse of the performance of deference Joe has demanded. The relationship therefore exposes the contradiction between the appearance of advancement and the continuation of female silencing.
Tea Cake: Apparent Equality and Persistent Gender Norms
Tea Cake appears to invert earlier patterns by treating Janie as a companion rather than a subordinate; they fish, gamble, and work side by side in the Everglades. However, the relationship still contains moments that test Janie’s independence. Tea Cake’s decision to take Janie’s money without consultation and his later act of striking her to reassert dominance in front of other men show that egalitarian ideals are not automatically realised. Hurston withholds a wholly celebratory ending: Janie’s shooting of Tea Cake, although legally exonerated, leaves her widowed and returns her to Eatonville alone. The final image of Janie “pull[ing] in her horizon like a great fish-net” suggests self-possession achieved through experience rather than through any single partnership.
Conclusion
Through the cumulative effect of three marriages, Hurston challenges the assumption that women’s fulfilment is found in obedience or economic protection. Each relationship reveals a different facet of traditional expectation—labour, status, and romantic idealisation—yet none supplies a stable resolution. Janie’s voice at the novel’s close demonstrates that growth occurs through successive refusals rather than through the discovery of an ideal male partner. The text therefore presents female development as an ongoing process shaped by the social constraints of race, class, and gender in the Jim Crow South.
References
- Hurston, Z.N. (1937) Their Eyes Were Watching God. J.B. Lippincott.
- Wall, C.A. (1995) Women of the Harlem Renaissance. Indiana University Press.
- Washington, M.H. (1990) The black woman’s search for identity in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God. Modern Fiction Studies, 36(3), pp. 371–385.

