Their Eyes Were Watching God

Their eyes were watching god reading questions

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Chapter One
Describe the contrast made for the “porch sitters” as workers and as storytellers (1-2).
How do the porch sitters respond to Janie’s return to town?
Men
Women


What is Janie’s impression of the porch sitters?

Chapter Two
Janie has an identity problem until she is around six.  Why?
racial identity problem
personal identity problem
social identity problem
On page 12, the narration changes.  Why might it be necessary for someone else to begin telling Janie’s story now?
On pages 10-11, the narrator describes Janie’s awakening urges to experience life, love, etc…  Where does she first notice this urge?
What does Nanny do to short circuit Janie’s longing to experience life?
What simile is used to describe the way Nanny treats Janie’s first kiss?  (page 12)  *hint: kinda gross
What are Nanny’s plans for Janie?
How does Janie feel about Nanny’s plans for her?
What metaphor does Nanny use to describe the plight of black women?  What does she mean?  (page 14)
What was Nanny’s mulatto daughter’s name?  How might the name relate to Janie’s experiences under the pear tree?
What parallel experiences have implanted negative fears about men in Nanny’s head?

Chapter Three
What troubles Janie about her marriage to Logan Killicks?  (pages 22-23)
What is Nanny’s definition of the good life? (What does Nanny think is important in life – especially in regards to Logan Killicks?)
Chapter three ends with Janie’s first dream dying.  What had that dream been?

Chapter Four
Describe Joe Starks.
What metaphor does Joe use to describe his lifelong dream?  What does he mean?   (page 27)
What is the significance of Joe and Janie’s meeting under the trees?
What does Logan Killicks do to finally make Janie decide to leave?
What symbolic action does Janie do that indicates her readiness for change, as she leaves Logan?
Janie leaves with what she calls a new dream.  What is it?  How is it different from her first dream?  (pages 30-31)







Chapter Five
How does Joe Starks get his reputation started in West Maitland/Eatonville?
What general lesson about speaking do Janie and Tony Taylor learn at the grand opening of Joe Stark’s store?  (pages 39-41) (In other words, who is the speaker of the town and why?)
What honor is bestowed upon Joe because of his ability to speak and move the people?
On page 40 we see Joe’s first effort to silence Janie, to keep her from her own “voicing.”  Describe that incident.
How does Janie react to Joe’s silencing her?
What does Joe ask of Janie that is parallel to what Killicks asks?
How does Janie feel about her second marriage?  (page 44)
What is Joe Stark’s definition of the good life?  How does his compare with Nanny’s?

Chapter Six
What significance does the store porch play in Janie’s life?  (pages 50-51, 53)
What two demands does Joe make upon Janie that keeps her from being herself?  Why does he make them?  (pages 50-51)
Janie’s first oration comes as a shock to the town.  How does Hambo describe her “voice?”
Find an example of hyperbole (see literary terms) on page 62.  Explain its meaning.  
One page 67, the narrator says that Janie “learned to hush.”  Why has she been forced to learn this lesson?
Jody kills another of Janie’s dreams with what aggressive/abusive act?  What does she learn about her marriage?  (page 69)
What significant act does Janie commit that begins her finding a “voice?”

Chapter Seven
How has marriage and silence affected Janie?
Janie finally can take no more verbal abuse from Jody.  What does she say to silence him?
What is “playing the dozens?”  Why does Sam Watson mention this game after Janie’s outburst?
What effect do Janie’s words have on Jody’s psyche?  (page 75-76)

Chapter Eight
How does Jody treat Janie when he gets sick?
Jody is on his death bed when Janie finally tries to tell him something about himself and her.  What does she say has been behind his lack of acceptance of her as a person?  (page 82)
At Jody’s death, what symbolic gesture does Janie make to assert her sense of self?

Chapter Nine
The narrator uses the metaphor, “Janie starched and ironed her face and came set in the funeral behind her veil.”  What about Janie’s behavior is being described?  
What two small changes does Janie make after Jody’s death?  (page 85)
What resentment does Janie harbor for her grandmother?  
What does she say Nanny took away from her?

Chapter Ten
Upon their first meeting, what kinds of things do Janie and Vergible Woods (Tea Cake) do?
This chapter closes with an analogy; the moon “quenching the thirst of the day.”  How does this reflect Janie’s situation?

Chapter Eleven
How is Tea Cake’s treatment of Janie different than Logan’s and Jody’s?
What speech characteristic does Tea Cake encourage in Janie?  (page 104)
Chapter Twelve
What is the town’s reaction to Tea Cake and Janie’s relationship?
What is Tea Cake offering Janie in this relationship?  (page 105)
What does Janie mean when she says Tea Cake “done taught me de maiden language all over?”

Chapter Thirteen
What was the narrator’s reason for telling Annie Tyler’s story?
What has happened to Janie’s $200 dollars which she was keeping secret from Tea Cake?
What happens when Tea Cake tries to get the money back?
How does Tea Cake prove his sincerity to Janie?  (page 122)

Chapter Fourteen
What is the first thing Tea Cake teaches Janie once they get to “de muck?”
Tea Cake asks the same of Janie as had Killicks and Starks (pages 126-127).  Yet Janie’s reaction is totally different.  What is asked?  Why is the response different?
The new experiences have given Janie a new voice.  Find the sentence on page 128 that describes her change.

Chapter Fifteen
What happens to change Janie and Tea Cake’s relationship?
How does Janie react to this change?  How is this different from her response in previous marriages?

Chapter Sixteen
Describe Mrs. Turner.  How is she different from Janie?
Which of Janie’s husbands would she have suited?
How does Mrs. Turner feel about Tea Cake?

Chapter Seventeen
Like Jody, Tea Cake slaps Janie.  How different is her reaction?
How does Tea Cake get even with Mrs. Turner for meddling in his marriage?  

Chapter Eighteen
The personification, “The sea was walking the earth with a heavy heel” (page 153) describes the action in this chapter.  What specifically does the line describe?
What happens to Tea Cake as he tries to save Janie?

Chapter Nineteen
Describe the burial of the storm’s dead.  (pages 161-162)
What sickness overtakes Tea Cake?
How does the sickness affect Tea Cake’s moods?
What must Janie do to save herself?
How do Janie’s friends turn on her?
How does Janie’s new voice help to save herself?  (page 178)

Chapter Twenty
Janie mentions the “horizon” motif on page 182.  What does she mean?
How has Janie’s telling of her story helped her friend Phoebe?  (page 182-183)
What is Janie’s concept of “the good life?”

 

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Last updated by Gabriela S #847518
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1) In Chapter One, we learn that porches are the usual place for community assembly, and are also the only place where people can truly feel human: all day the people feel like "mules and brutes have occupied their skins." But only on the porches, at the end of the day, do their skins feel "powerful and human." The porch is also the setting of Janie's revelations to Phoebe.

Source(s)

http://www.gradesaver.com/their-eyes-were-watching-god/study-guide/summary-chapters-1-4

Do you every find the answer to these questions

How do the porch sitters respond to Janie’s return to town?
Men- The men stared at her beautiful body. Admiring her beauty.
Women- The women dragged Janie's name through the mud. Talk badly about her. They were very jealous of her and the fact that their husbands were head over heels for her.

Source(s)

The book