This is how the novel opens and closes structurally.
a frame narrative with Janie telling her story to Pheoby
Janie’s childhood friend and the listener to her story.
Pheoby
Represents Janie’s early vision of love and harmony.
One central theme: the search for this.
identity or selfhood
This voice opens the novel with commentary on judgment and dreams.
the narrator
Janie’s first marriage is motivated primarily by this belief of Nanny’s.
security over love
The husband who silences Janie and uses power to control her
Joe Starks
Represents Janie’s dreams and future possibilities.
horizon
Developed through Janie’s marriages.
love vs. security
Warns Janie that love is unreliable.
Nanny
This event forces Janie and Tea Cake to confront nature’s power.
the hurricane
The husband who challenges Janie’s ideas of love and partnership.
Tea Cake
Symbolizes Janie’s autonomy and Joe’s desire to control her.
Janie's hair
Shown in Joe and Janie’s power dynamic.
voice vs. silence (power/oppression)
Silences Janie publicly, revealing patriarchal control.
Joe
This moment marks Janie’s first public reclaiming of her voice
when she confronts Joe in the store
Whose life experience shapes Janie’s early beliefs about safety?
Nanny
Symbolizes the limits of human power and control.
the hurricane
Emphasized by the hurricane and the trial.
humans’ powerlessness against nature/fate
Encourages Janie to speak and live freely.
Tea Cake
This structural shift reflects Janie’s independence at the end.
Janie returning to Eatonville alone
This character best represents the struggle between love and independence.
Janie
Reflects Janie’s movement from silence to voice.
storytelling/Janie's voice
Shown by Janie’s growth across relationships.
female independence / self-realization
Reflects emotional fulfillment at the end of the novel.
Janie