Food Services in collaboration with the College of Agriculture Science should implement a system to construct a university-run orchard, combating the apple epidemic and enriching the educational experience of students, by working as a team to establish a course of action, planting trees, cultivating the plants, and, finally, retailing the apples throughout campus in a proper manner…
Book Poster The tree in my poster was resembling the mockingbird’s home. Just like Maycomb is to Tom Robinson and Boo Radley. With the tree I went for a drawn one because I felt that it resembled the book. It does so because the book is just a story and an “imaginary” one. The drawn tree is also not real and “imaginary,” just like the story. I chose a black and white one because that is how I pictured the story in my head. I chose grey as a color for the rectangles because everything or…
Janie was a young girl who was willing to do anything to find love. She compared her life to a pear tree. Janie wanted to be loved and kissed by someone like the bees loved the tree. Throughout the book, Janie was struggling to find her identity because she kept looking to find happiness in guys instead of making herself happy. Janie aimed to make everyone else happy and please them, but then she realized that she needed to make herself happy and do things for herself. In the novel, Their Eyes…
Generally speaking, Their Eyes were Watching God is a novel about a black woman trying to find true love while being oppressed by a variety of factors including nature and class differences. Men, however, top the list; the main character, Janie, had a total of three husbands, two of which treated her poorly. The third husband, Tea Cake, was the exception. He helped Janie accomplish inner peace by allowing her to flourish into her own character. Janie would not have found Tea Cake, however, had…
Forged in Mother Nature Topic #3 Explore how Hurston uses elements of nature as a metaphor for Janie’s Life Life often sends the individual on a journey to achieve what the heart desires. In Zora Neale Hurston’s “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” Janie embarks on a trip to discover her sexual desires, independence, and overall contentment. Throughout her life she is repeatedly compared to multiple aspects of nature. For Janie, nature is a metaphorical representation for various experiences…
Seeing love as a goal, a great achievement, at a young age Janie believed in love and pursued it. In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston a woman's obsession to express sexuality evolves. The main character Janie begins her adventure into womanhood at the age of sixteen, unwillingly leaving her innocence behind when she sees a significant correlation with a bee and a pear blossom to sex but mostly love. On a search Janie makes decisions that don’t help her to reach her…
first love with him. For the next five years, Namiko waited and waited, but there was still no sign of Sasuke. On a cloudy, windy day, Namiko decided to go to market to by ingredients for supper. Walking to the market, she walked through the path of cherry blossom trees and noticed a wilted blossom in the trees. She picked up the blossom and felt sad for no reason. She felt something in her body that signaled something terrible is coming her way. Namiko walked towards the market and entered…
Time also by Robert Frost is about an obstinate cow that breaks through a wall to escape her pasture for an apple orchard where she devours apples until she feels agony and reaches her inevitable end. Robert Frost uses multiple images of a wall and a cow as extended metaphors to develop various themes. In Mending…
“Love” portrays Janie’s wants and need from loving someone. Prior to Janie’s marriages, she found herself under a pear tree, and “From then on [she] knew that by [it] being in [her] life things were destined to change 'cause love”. Subsequently, Johnny Taylor appears, who she was never attracted to, suddenly, was tempted by his appearance and kissed him. Under the pear tree she received a ideal of what her future lovers should live up too. The lines,“The world looks so brand new to me now that I…
The pear tree and its blossoming buds resemble her first sexual and emotional fulfillment with the young boy. The bees pollinating the tree made her wish upon her body being caressed and loved the way a woman feels when she gives herself to a man. Janie is naïve and immature about love; she has no idea of what real love is; she spends all her time under the tree envisioning what love looks and feels like. The pear tree represents the good, bad, growth, and different stages of her life (Hurston…