Zora Neil Hurston believes that all efforts to achieve personal goals are in vain due to unknown powers controlling the reality. She believes that these unknown powers are dominated by God and that he has Almighty existence in human life. Therefore, all events ultimately depend on the arbitrariness of God. This metaphysical reality is reflected in her novel "their eyes are seeing God." The implicit and dominant form of her philosophy exists not only in the whole novel but also in the development of the novel.
Zora Neale Hurston, known as one of the symbolic African-American women in the Harlem Renaissance in the 1930's. Heston is known as a non - fiction writer, anthropologist, folkloreist. During the Harlem Renaissance, Heston's literature as an Aston celebrated the black dialect and its tradition. Most of the story that she announced was "I drew a relationship with black residents in southern Florida and I was hardly concerned about racial cheating" (Bomarito 89). In 1937, Zola Neil Hurston spent seven weeks in Haiti and wrote her most famous and famous work. Their eyes saw God born in New York on September 18, 1937. This novel tells a promising story of a woman who discovered security and identity in the 1920s. Janie Mae Crawford is the protagonist of this novel. She knows her family in the form of her grandmother and she calls it a babysitter. Janie is blooming in every relationship
Anthropologist and author Heston talks about the life story of Janie Mae Crawford Janie Mae Crawford is a proud, independent black woman who has returned to her home Florida since middle age. Through a series of memories, the novel explores Crawford 's identity, the fight against her poverty, and the relationship of life with men. Heston 's novel is now admired by their strong interest in the African American culture and its feminist theme. Steinbeck 's novel tells the story of the poor Oklahoma tenant who moved to California to become a migrant worker. This story about that journey from the Joad family and the dust bowl was welcomed immediately at the time of publication. Steinbeck has a strong interest in the situation of migrant workers and the misconduct they suffered. After this book was published, the public's attention to this problem led to changes in the Labor Law.