CHARACTERS & VOICES
SETTINGS & CONTEXTS
PLOT & EVENTS
THEMES & IDEAS
SYMBOLS & IMAGES
100

This character believes Janie’s spirit is killed by hard work and advises her to seek her horizon.

Phoeby Watson

100

The majority of the novel is a flashback framed by Janie telling her story on this location.

The porch of her house in Eatonville

100

Janie’s first marriage is arranged to this much older farmer, symbolizing a life of duty.

Logan Killicks

100

Emerson's central doctrine that urges individuals to trust their own intuition and inner voice.

Self-Reliance

100

Janie’s hair, a symbol of her unique sensuality and power, is forced to be wrapped in one of these by Jody.

Head rag

200

This Transcendentalist author lived for two years at Walden Pond to "live deliberately."

Henry David Thoreau

200

The Transcendentalist movement was centered in this state during the 1830s and 1840s.

Massachusetts

200

This natural disaster in the Everglades serves as the novel's climax and a test of the characters' relationship with God/nature.

hurricane

200

Janie’s lifelong quest, symbolized by the horizon, for this ideal of partnership, passion, and mutual respect.

True love

200

Thoreau uses this body of water as a symbol for the transcendental soul and the depth of nature.

Walden Pond

300

Janie’s third husband, who represents love, play, and equality, but is also flawed by possessiveness.

Vergible "Tea Cake" Woods

300

What is the Everglades (or the Muck)?

The "Muck" is the fertile farmland near Lake Okeechobee where Janie finds true love and community.

300

What is "Civil Disobedience

Thoreau was briefly jailed for refusing to pay a tax, an event that inspired his essay "Resistance to This."

300

What is Nature to transcendentalists?

The Transcendentalist belief that God, or the divine, is present in every aspect of this, not just in churches.

300

This tree under which young Janie has her erotic awakening symbolizes organic, natural love.

Pear tree

400

This influential friend and mentor to Thoreau edited The Dial and wrote the essay "Self-Reliance."

Ralph Waldo Emerson

400

What is Brook Farm?

This utopian commune, founded by Transcendentalists, famously failed after a devastating fire.

400

What was the event where Janie is forced to publicly shame Joe Starks, leading to the final rupture in their marriage

The storefront argument over her aging appearance

400

Hurston explores this theme through Janie’s three marriages, showing her struggle to own her story and speak freely

voice/self-discovery

400

For Transcendentalists, this season often symbolizes rebirth, intuition, and spiritual growth.

Spring

500

Janie’s second husband, the ambitious mayor of Eatonville who values power and status over emotion.

 Joe "Jody" Starks

500

The novel begins and ends in this town, a real-life all-Black municipality in Florida.

Eatonville

500

What was the tragic event that forces Janie to make a terrible, loving choice at the very end of the novel. (Teacake)

Teacake is shot

500

What is individualism

Transcendentalism and Janie’s journey champion this, a radical focus on the individual’s experience over society’s rules.

500

The novel’s central symbol for Janie’s dreams and life’s possibilities, which she finally "pulled in" at the end.

The horizon

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