Their Eyes Were Watching God

Jody does not want Janie to participate in the storytelling, ribbing, and general conversation that takes place at the store. He even hints that the mayor's wife is better than the people in Eatonville, and that Janie shouldn't associate with such "trash

Jody does not want Janie to participate in the storytelling, ribbing, and general conversation that takes place at the store. He even hints that the mayor's wife is better than the people in Eatonville, and that Janie shouldn't associate with such "trash." How do Jody's restrictions further separate Janie from her fellow citizens? How do you think they feel about her? In what way does this make Jody even more powerful in the town? (Answer in one paragraph.)

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Joe gains power in the same way that whites traditionally did, by gaining a position of leadership (the mayorship) and using it to dominate others. However, Janie finds that the type of power that she prefers in a man is personal, rather than constructed. Jody derives his power from contol over others including Janie. Janie feels isolated and lost having no social interaction except with her husband. This isolation makes others perceive her as an outsider or untouchable because she is merely a reflection of Jody: not her own person.