Compare And Contrast Their Eyes Were Watching God

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Their Eyes Were Watching God Zora Neale Hurston wrote this great book about a girl changing into a young women. Oprah changed it all she made the book seem like a love story but this could never be. In the movie Janie was seen as a strong young women but in the book she was just a young lady who listens everything that she was told to do. All of Janie’s marriages caused a dramatic change in her life, Oprah changed the main relationship in the movie. This book would reflect some young lady and make her feel like “Janie” and they might compare their life to a pear tree. No one should change a classic book like this because this is something really good. The book Janie is more interesting than the movie Janie. Book Janie never really did …show more content…
Pheoby has a really unique relationship and they are really good friends to where if they talk about something they want say nothing. In the book Janie and Pheoby relationship is the only pure relationship but in the movie it shows otherwise. They fussed and argued in the movie more than they did in the book. “You can tell’em what ah say if you wants to. Dat’s just de same as me ‘cause mah tongue is in mah friends mouf” (Hurston 6). Pheoby and Janie would only tell stuff unless they both agreed to tell even though they didn’t care but that’s their conversation. This relationship was the changed in the movie to making them not really that main relationship that stays …show more content…
She had dreams about her ideal relationship, Janie dreamed of marrying the man of her dreams and as she looks at the pear tree she sees herself. The pear tree symbolize Janie both the book and movie. “Now woman forget all those things they don’t want to remember, and remember everything they don’t want to forget” (Kendall). Janie expectation for life is way different now that she been through all of this that happened to her. The journey Janie has been on made her realize that she isn’t thirteen anymore, “She can wish and hope for better things, but she lives in reality that is very different” (Kendall). After everything that happened to her you would think she would go back home and stay. You shouldn’t think everything will be easy in the world. Once you go out into the world you will see that it’s not a

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