Search
  • Search
  • My Storyboards

TEWWG Final

Create a Storyboard
Copy this Storyboard
TEWWG Final
Storyboard That

Create your own Storyboard

Try it for Free!

Create your own Storyboard

Try it for Free!

Storyboard Text

  • Character Analysis
  • Talkin' 'bout me lookin' old!
  • Setting Analysis
  • It's so easy to make yo'self out God Almighty when you ain't got nothin' tuh strain against but women and chickens
  • “Love is like the sea. It's a moving thing, but still and all it takes its shape from the shore it meets, and it's different with every shore.”
  • Theme
  • Janie and Joe have a big impact on the story i feel because they are two of the most important characters in the story. Joe Starks husband of Janie Starks. Joe is Janie's first husband as she has multiple during the story. He was very controlling with her and treated her poorly. Bu joe is important because it helps the development of our main character Janie.
  • Conflict
  • “But oh God, don't let Tea Cake be off somewhere hurt and Ah not know nothing about it. And God, please suh, don't let him love nobody else but me”
  • The setting of Eatonville is ironic for Janie. She was unable to find happiness there. By making Janie's principal residence within the town, Hurston makes it clear that despite Janie's numerous trials and tribulations. It emphasizes Janie's poverty and the relative decency and integrity of the lower classes.giving a sense of naturalness and righteousness to Janie's innocence.
  • Point of View (POV)
  • She didn't forgive her for marrying a man as dark as Tea Cake, but she felt she could remedy that. That was what her brother was born for.
  • Janie's search for unconditional, true, and fulfilling love. She experiences different kinds of love throughout her life. But that can be used as a theme is to never give up on love and fight for your love. If you don't fight for your love what kind of love is it. That is why Janie has multiple love interests throughout the book.
  • Language Dialect
  • Janie clashes with the values that others impose upon her. The confrontation between Janie and the insane Tea Cake in Chapter 19 marks the moment at which Janie asserts herself in the face of the most difficult obstacle she has had to face. Janie feels increasingly aggravated and disturbed by Jody's constant remarks about her age and her body.
  • Their Eyes Were Watching God is told from the perspective of an omniscient third-person narrator. The narrator has access to the inner lives of each character. Unlike Janie and the other characters, the narrator does not speak in the informal Southern dialect. The result is a narrator who is not exactly Janie but who is abstracted from her.
  • Hurston uses dialect to bring the story as well as the characters to life. The use of dialect makes the characters seem real; they are believable. After making some initial adjustments as a reader to become familiar with the language, readers feel as if they were actually a part of the action.She uses formal English for transitional passages and descriptions o time that incorporate modernist sensibilities and philosophy.
  • Mah Janie is uh high time woman and useter things.
Over 30 Million Storyboards Created