Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Mistreatment of Women in the Works of Zora Neale Hurston :: Biography Biographies Essays
      The Mistreatment of Women in the Works of Zora Neale Hurston                 Society is suffering from a number of serious social problems related to  women, and to the interaction between the two sexes. Male domination and  patriarchy have been under challenge by feminists and the women's movement. The  economic, social and political subjection of women around the world, the  violence brought against women and their confinement has been brought to the  forefront in recent years.           Zora Neale Hurston's stories speak out against the uncivil and unjust  treatment of women especially in their marriages. Hurston's stories reveal the  disturbing situation for women about mistreatment abuse in the 1930s, when  speaking out was unheard of. This was the time period for the setting of  Hurston's stories, and her stories reflect violence against women that occurred  during that era.            "Zora Neale Hurston's works are brilliant glimpses into the mind of a woman  who lived life for what it was, who wanted nothing more then to have"...a busy  life, a just mind and timely death." "She lived as she wrote, to the fullest,  she wasn't just a writer, but also an anthropologist who brought to the light  the folklore, and culture of nations that before there had been little study of.  She brought new, exciting views of the world through her poetic words, and is a  shining example of what it is to be a woman. Intelligent, driven, and confidant"  (Walker 8).            At only thirteen years old Hurston was thrown out of her father's house  because her stepmother didn't approve of her or her siblings. At an early age  Huston knew about struggling and making a way for herself (Ford 7-9). In Zora  Neale Hurston's autobiography she said, "There is something about poverty that  smells like death. Dead dreams dropping off the heart like leaves in a dry  season and rotting around the feet, impulses smothered too long in the fetid air  of underground caves. The soul lived in a sickly air. People can be slave ships  in shoes (Hurston 37).            Hurston was mistreated as a child, and in her story "Drenched in Light" it  reveals some of her background of child abandonment. She also focused on women's  rights and fights in marriages.  					    
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