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![]() MYTH AND VIOLENCE IN ZORA HURSTONS THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD Daniel Wenger Writers comment: Over the past year, in an effort to achieve a deeper understanding of violence, I have been examining its mythological and aesthetic dimensions (previously, I had analyzed and evaluated violence within a moral context). The marital violence in Zora Hurstons Their Eyes Were Watching God has been a prominent issue in the last decade, in large part because of its paradoxical status within the feminist framework through which Their Eyes has been traditionally interpreted. The following paper was born out of a dual attempt to examine violence in a nonmoral context and explain the marital violence of Their Eyes which feminism had highlighted and made problematic. Professor Barrishs teaching style and outlook were helpful in developing a paradigm through which to interpret Their Eyes. Barrish is not limited by any particular literary theory, but moves easily between various critical strategies, employing what is interesting and productive. He uses theory, I believe, not to prove or necessarily uncover meaning, but to produce it, and his approach put me in an experimental mood. It was not until after sampling several paradigms that I settled on that of the creation story, which I felt best explained the violence that permeates the entire text. Daniel Wenger Instructors comment: Daniel Wengers essay impresses on several levels. Beyond the grace and sophistication of the essays prose, Wenger provides a detailed, careful reading of Hurstons novel, a book that until very recently literary critics have denigrated or ignored. Wengers reading shows how Hurstons work resonates with texts long taken to be among the most powerful and complex in Western cultureGenesis and the Odysseyeven as Hurston develops her own themes and motifs. Phillip Barrish, English Department Joseph Campbell, The Journey Inward Janies story begins in a utopian garden, wherein there is a tree bearing forbidden fruita pear tree representing sexuality: She saw a dust-bearing bee sink into the sanctum of a bloom; the thousand sister-calyxes arch to meet the love embrace and the ecstatic shiver of the tree from root to tiniest branch creaming in every blossom and frothing with delight (11). Janie is, of course, drawn to the forbidden fruit and soon eats of it when she kisses Johnny Taylor over her grandmothers fence. And just as Adam and Eve enter into life when they eat of the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden, so Janies life commence[s] at Nannys gate (10). Spying her kissing Johnny Taylor over the fence, Janies grandmother calls her into the house. Janie half believe[s] that her grandmother has not seen her, and her grandmother circuitously approaches the subject. Finally, confronting Janie, her grandmother slap[s] her face violently (13). The scene maintains a detailed parallel with Genesis. God, by definition, knows when Adam and Eve have eaten of the forbidden fruit. Yet, like Janies grandmother, God temporarily feigns ignorance, first calling out to Adam as if unaware of his whereabouts, and then asking innocently how Adam came to know he was naked. And Adam, like Janie, apparently believes, or half believes, that God does not know he has eaten of the fruit. And finally, just as Janies grandmother punishes Janie by slapping her and forcing her to marry Logan Killicks, so God curses Adam and Eve. In both storiesif in fact they are separate storiesviolence accompanies life and distinguishes it from paradise. Entering into life, however, and experiencing its inherent violence do not mean that Janie has reconciled herself with it; her creation is nowhere near complete. Although she protests, Janie finally submits to her grandmother and marries Logan Killicks. Janie is not yet ready, however, to leave the Garden of Eden, and she maintains a utopian view of marriage. Although she does not love Killicks, Janie insists that she will love him after she marries him, since that is what marriage [means] (20). During the marriage, Janie is at least verbally exposed to additional violence, as Killicks at one point tells her, Ahll take holt uh dat ax and come in dere and kill yuh! (30). What is significant about Janies brief relationship with Killicks, however, is that whereas she passively accepts her grandmothers slap, Janie returns and perhaps initiates the violence with Killicks. In bed, she tells him, Sposin Ah wuz to run off and leave yuh sometime, which put[s] a terrible ache in Logans body and makes him resentful in his agony (29). Whether or not Janies violence is justified is irrelevant. The conditional violence of life is neither justified nor fair, and what is important, in a mythological framework, is that Janies violence indicates an increased participation in life. Joe Starks is, essentially, a step above Killicks. Through Joe, Janie is, for the first time, surrounded by a community environment. However, Joe prevents Janie from actually participating in that community. Early in their marriage, Janie tells Joe, Youse always off talkin and fixin things, and Ah feels lak Ahm jus markin time (43). Further, the narrator tells us that Janie loved the conversation and sometimes she thought up good stories about the mule, but Joe had forbidden her to indulge (50). Hurstons use of the word forbidden and the strange ambiguity of the word indulge when the reference is clearly to living again evoke Genesis. God, in forbidding Adam and Eve to eat of the fruit, prevents them from participating in life. Like Janie, Adam and Eve are constricted to wandering aimlessly about the wonderful garden. Neither God nor Joe, however, is an oppressor in the usual sense of the word; neither actually controls subordinates. Life is readily accessible to Adam, Eve, and Janie, and requires a personal, psychological overcoming, rather than the overthrow of a more powerful, external being. Adam and Eve must simply eat of the fruit or disobey orders. And Janie must come to terms with the violence necessary to life. At the precise point at which Janie acts violently towards Joe, he begins to die. Literally, that Joe should begin dying the moment Janie verbally abuses him is a ridiculous coincidence. Mythologically, however, it is both necessary and predictable. Joe is what separates Janie from the community, and what makes this separation possible is Janies unwillingness to participate in the violence upon which life depends; Joes existence hinges upon Janies passivity. Significantly, Janies violence against Joe is much greater than that she inflicts on Killicks. Whereas with Killicks Janie says only a few mildly injurious words, she humiliates Joe before an audience. The demands and the rewardsthe magnitude of the violence required from Janie and the intensity or depth of the living which followsincrease as the novel progresses. Tea Cake represents the final stage in Janies maturation, her complete immersion into life. Tea Cakes actual name is Vergible Woods. The root of his first name, verge, has two possible meanings: a limit or point beyond which something begins, in this case the woods, or a general inclination or propensity towards something. The first meaning is applicable to Janie; Janies relationship with Tea Cake places her on the verge of the woods (which I take to mean an unmediated and unprotected interaction with life). The second meaning, which accentuates the first, is indicative of Tea Cakes personal bent for the woods and his wild character. In either case, Tea Cake represents an intimacy with life. As such, he is both more alive and more violent than any of Janies previous close relations. Soon after their marriage, Tea Cake is involved in a fight that he describes as follows: He lost his razor tryin to git loose from me. He wuz hollerin for me tuh turn him loose, but baby, Ah turnt him every way but loose. Ah left him on the doorstep and got here to yuh de quickest way Ah could (121). As far as the reader knows, Tea Cake killed his enemy and left him dead on the doorstep. And when Tea Cake decides to teach Janie how to shoot, he tells her, ÔOh, you need tuh learn how. Taint no need uh you not knowin how tuh handle shootin tools. Even if you didnt never find no game, its always some trashy rascal dat needs uh good killin, after which he laughs (125). As critics have pointed out, Tea Cake and Janies journey down into the muck is a symbolic journey into black culture. In addition, however, it is a journey into a magical or unnatural, mythological realm: The hurricane deserves particular attention for what it reveals about the relationship between life and violence. In the midst of the destruction, the narrator writes: As soon as Tea Cake went out pushing wind in front of him, he saw that the wind and water had given life to lots of things that folks think of as dead and given death to so much that had been living things (152). That Hurston should say that the objects are alive simply because they are moving is no accident. Metaphorically, the hurricane is not simply destructive; it gives previously dead things a chance to live. Further, life requires violence and death. The previously dead things, now living, demand a world lethal to human beings and other animals, and vice versa. During her stay on the muck, which for the most part precedes the storm, Janie becomes progressively more violent. Earlier in the novel, Janie feels sorry for the town mule when several men harass it: "She got up without a word and went off for the shoes [away from the scene with the mule]. A little war of defense for helpless things was going on inside her. People ought to have some regard for helpless things" (54). With Tea Cake, on the other hand, Janie shoot[s] the head off a hawk and hunts alligators for their hides and teeth as a way of having fun (125). Nothing in the nature of helpless things has changed; the hawk and the crocodile are no more well-equipped to defend themselves against Janies gun than the mule is against the mens teasing. Janie, however, has undergone a fundamental transformation and now accepts and participates in the very sort of violence she previously criticized and shunned. And whereas with Killicks and Starks Janie is only verbally abusive, she strikes Tea Cake and tries to beat him (131). I do not mean to imply, by either of these examples, that violence against animals or marital violencewhich includes Tea Cakes physical violence against Janieis a specific form of violence necessary to life. I do mean to suggest that, within a mythological framework, these incidents are metaphors for the general violence necessary for life. Janies marriage to Tea Cake is not literal; nor is it meant, like The Brady Bunch, to instruct its audience in the operations and methodologies of the ideal family. Rather, it is a union symbolic of Janies union with and participation in life; and as a symbol of this union, Janies relationship with Tea Cake is violent. Janies violence culminates in her shooting Tea Cake. It is fitting that Tea Cake teaches Janie how to shoot. As a representation of Janies nearly unmediated participation in life, Tea Cake introduces Janie to the extreme violence upon which life depends. And in compelling Janie to kill him, Tea Cake compels her to accept that violence in its most painful and difficult form. But more than a convenient indication of Janies maturation, the killing of Tea Cake is a necessary act. Again, in a mythological framework, Tea Cake is not a literal human being but the symbol of Janies status; with Tea Cake, Janie stands at the edge of the woods, on the verge of entering it. His existence, however, indicates her unwillingness to do so. As long as Janie is with Vergible Woods, she is not in the woods. His death symbolizes her union with life, and that she kills him a willingness to participate in the violence necessary to bring that union about. The killing of Tea Cake is, essentially, one of those brutal rites to which Campbell refers and which reconciles the human sensibilities with the conditions of life. The mythological hero never remains in the magical or unnatural realm of adventure and discovery, but at the end of his/her journey returns home. Odysseus return to Ithaca is perhaps the most widely known example. Similarly, Their Eyes concludes in Janies bedroom back in Eatonville. Here, Janie briefly reviews the recent events of her life: Reference Hurston, Zora Neale. Their Eyes Were Watching God. Ed. Henry Louis Gates. New York: Harper, 1990. |