Their Eyes Were Watching God
identify one example of person v nature conflict. Explain how it propels the plot.
It is from Their Eyes Were Watching God
It is from Their Eyes Were Watching God
Consider chapter 18. This chapter emphasizes the wisdom of people who watch nature and God. The Indians realize first that the hurricane is coming, but Tea Cake dismisses them in a stereotypical anglocentric capitalist manner. He believes that the Indians are wrong because they have "always been wrong." Why else would they have lost their land? Tea Cake does not realize that he too at last has become too dependent on money. He does not want to leave because he does not want to lose any potential earnings. Hurston is commenting that American blacks are too far removed from their roots and the need to watch God and the messages he sends them. The people who are closest to nature (the Indians and the Bahamans) understand God's ways and signals. The blacks and the whites are removed from perceiving God because they are too concerned about money. Only when God's fury and power are literally knocking down their front door do Tea Cake and Janie "watch God."