Failure is a part of life that no one can avoid. The fear of failure is that you can beat someone in a place that you feel like you can not stand up and feel that you can not overcome that situation. Failure in one situation seems to instantly annihilate all the hard work as if all the time and effort did not succeed. Failure can also hurt and cause even anxiety and melancholy but it also makes people discover that they can conquer it even if they are crushed and eventually can succeed.
Zola Neil Hirston 's sweat Zola Neil Hirston is an excellent writer that reflects her life in most novels, short stories and essays. She was a Harlem Renaissance writer, also known as the "New Black Movement", but her work was not adequately recognized at the beginning. All Harlem Renaissance writers hope to write articles on race in a political way. - Symbol of sweat by Zora Neale Hurston "Sweat" by Zora Neale Hurston is full of symbolism, from captured images to those requiring more insight. Religion has obviously played an important role in Heston's life, and it is easy to see in "sweat" that refers to snakes and Gethsemane. After analyzing these stories, they brought a deeper meaning to the story and made it possible for the reader to understand the full meaning of "sweat".
Love Zora Neil Hurston Their eyes are seeing God Zora Neil Hurston (1937) novels "their eyes see God" is self pursuit and pursuit of true love. The story about an attractive African American journey is spoken in a small town pouch called Eatonville. Her name is Janie Crawford. The struggle for her to find friendship and herself began with a girl who lost her parents. She lives with her grandmother, a wealthy white family of nanny. - Brave voice in their eyes of Jenny explains how to learn how to live and life by seeing God through the use of southern black language Zola Neil Hurston. Jason, who is the hero of Heston's "The Eye Looks at God", is a woman who despises her expectations of people and is a better person through her own life. Not only does Janie not meet the material benefits, he immediately finds true happiness and love of life.
Zola Neill Hurston 's Men See God Zola Neil Hirston tells stories about how their eyes see God and how young women Janny finds her place and identity in his life. Deborah Clarke believes that slavery in this novel is forced to lose a woman and lose its identity and definition. - Jenny's experience of learning with their eyes is seen by Zola Neil Hirston. Jani looks at her life like a big tree in a tree, something to be encountered, done, done, not done. Dawn and fate of a branch "(8) When Jenny was in her teens, she often sat down under a pear tree and dreamed of becoming a blooming tree She is aspiring for more things she is 16 years old When she kissed Johnny Taylor to see if this was what she was looking for.