In sight of Jody´s death, Janie finds
herself content with a life filled with freedom, one she had never been
familiar with. From a young age Janie had been controlled by Nanny and both of
her husbands, however their absence in her life after Jody dying lets her
experience a whole new way of living. She takes it in and although she is
pleased with her independence, she keeps it hidden from the town people´s agile
ears and judgmental tongues. Gradually
however, Janie does not care for the criticism she would receive. This is yet
another step in which Janie breaks down barriers of her former self, a Janie
that was preoccupied with other talk. It marks the start of this side of Janie,
until a reaching a complete transformation. We see in the beginning of the book
that when Janie comes back home in overalls she seems almost oblivious to those
speaking around her. Later
on, Tea Cake is introduced to the story, as he meets Janie and she quickly
notices his demeanor and sly way of talking. Another man in Janie´s life, but
this time it’s different and more towards the horizon than Janie will ever be.
When Tea Cake asks her to play checkers with her, it becomes a sign of what is
distinctive between him and the other men. He is respectful and unlike Jody, it
becomes apparent that Tea Cake sees Janie as an equal than an inferior. They
make their relationship public; again open to judgment that Janie ignores, once
again showing the growth in conquering her vulnerability. They move to
Jacksonville in promise of a life together. Though
Tea Cake cares for Janie more that the others, there is also this aspect of Tea
Cake, the gambling, his disappearances and how Janie falls completely gullible
to his words, that create a feeling of unease toward his character, a skeptical
view of what is to come for Janie and him. They soon move to the Everglades and
in chapter 15, when Janie experiences a grave feeling of jealousy overcome her,
watching Tea Cake and Nunkie flirt, we see the true toll of love and a sort of possession
that has taken over Janie. Janie meets Mrs. Turner, a
conceited and arrogant woman in her town that nonetheless befriends Janie. She
expresses her racist views toward black people, although being dark skinned as
well. She believes in race inferiority and believes that blacks are the ones to
fill that slot. Mrs. Turner´s character is a bizarre turn in the story, from
being racist towards her own race to controlling her husband; she seems to be the
epiphany of all Janie´s environment was not. When Mrs. Turner says Janie should marry her
brother, Tea Cake feels threatened by solely the suggestions and at the sight
of the brother in town, beats Janie in order to show his power over her.
Regardless of this unusual act of violence by Tea Cake, Janie does not show any
resentment. She is utterly in love with him to the point of dismissing the
flaws he bares. Later
on in the Everglades, very gradually, Tea Cake, Janie and other people from the
town observe as Native Americans travel up north. When asked why, they explain
that a storm is coming, news that is ignored by both Janie and Jody who refuse
to leave. The hurricane comes like the
Native Americans and many other immigrating had told both of them. It left the whole town in devastation and Tea
Cake watches in horror as the bodies are piled, segregated even at death,
coffins for those white and pits for those who are colored. During the hurricane
and their struggle Tea Cake had been bitten by a dog that later proves to have
been rabid, eventually affecting Tea Cake as he becomes paranoid and
delusional. He looses his sanity, slowly
and then all at once becoming wild. That is when Janie shoots him with the
rifle that he himself taught her to use. Janie is put on trial for murder but
as she speaks of her husband there is no doubt that this is a woman who loved Tea
Cake thus using herself as witness sets her free of charge. Now
that the journey that Tea Cake had offered Janie back in the Everglades was
done, she comes back home to Janie and sits at night to wonder about her life
back at the Everglades. Although her story ended with Tea Cake by her own hand,
she realizes that Tea Cake gave her that horizon that she so had been longing
since those days under the plum tree.
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