English, asked by AlliahRose425, 11 months ago

This excerpt from Their Eyes Were Watching God is significant because _____. Select all that apply.

Answers

Answered by aqsaahmed19945
12

Answer would be A and B.

Their Eyes Were Watching God is frequently celebrated for Hurston's remarkable utilization of dialect, especially her authority of provincial Southern dialect. She uses an intriguing account structure, part the introduction of the story between high scholarly portrayal and colloquial talk.  

Hurston's utilization of dialect parallels Janie's mission to discover her voice. As Henry Louis Gates Jr. writes in the afterword to most current releases of the book, Their Eyes Were Watching God is basically worried "with the venture of finding a voice, with dialect as an instrument of damage and salvation, of self - hood and strengthening." Jody smothers Janie's discourse, as when he keeps her from talking after he is well known leader; her scorn of him originates from this concealment of her distinction. Tea Cake, then again, draws in her discourse, speaking with her and putting himself on equivalent terms with her; her adoration for him originates from his regard for her distinction.  

After Janie finds her capacity to characterize herself by her discourse associations with others, she discovers that quiet also can be a wellspring of strengthening; having discovered her voice, she figures out how to control it. Additionally, the storyteller is quiet in obvious spots, neither uncovering why Janie isn't angry with Tea Cake's beating nor unveiling her words at the preliminary. As far as both the type of the novel and its topical substance, Hurston places incredible accentuation on the control of dialect as the wellspring of character and strengthening.

Answered by Sidyandex
5

It strengthens Janie's identity.

'Their Eyes were Watching God' is a novel of 1937 by African-American writer, Zora Neale Hurston.

It is set in the 20th century central and southern Florida and narrates how the main character, Janie Crawford matures from a vibrant but voiceless teenager into a woman who can control her own destiny.

It is all about the trials and tribulations faced by the central character and the societal norms of that period that was prevalent in America.

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