Why does joe starks die




















He also forces Janie to keep her luxurious hair bound up while working in the store. He is secretly jealous of other men touching or looking at it. About seven years into their marriage, Joe hits Janie for not preparing his dinner properly. After that, Janie falls out of love. She realizes she is saving herself up for some other man.

Eventually, she fires back and insults his manhood, shaming Joe publicly. Joe becomes increasingly ill and takes to his bed, refusing to see or speak to Janie. The doctor diagnoses Joe with fatal liver failure. Janie confronts Joe on his deathbed and basically tells him off. Is Tea Cake acting out of character when he beats Janie? Theme of male dominance, Tea Cake needed to assert possession over his wife. Janie kills Tea Cake to save her own life.

Tea Cake gets sicker and more violent and starts imagining that Janie is cheating on him, so he sleeps with a pistol. Janie loads a rifle to protect herself in case Tea Cake becomes violent. Finally, out of his mind, Tea Cake shoots at Janie, and she kills him in self-defense.

Tea Cake loves Janie as much as she loves him. Tea Cake shows Janie affection which is something that is missing in her marriage with Joe and Logan. Making Janie happy shows that he loves her because he is not happy unless she is. Hurston depicts Tea Cake as not simply a good or bad person, but instead as a real person who is complicated and not easily understood. However, in the middle of the storm, Tea Cake saves Janie from a rabid dog, ultimately sacrificing his own life in this act of love-driven heroism.

By the end of the book, Janie would describe love as joy, peace and happiness with another person. She would describe the relationship she had with Tea Cake as love.

Love is placing the need of someone else before your own. Janie did not have that with Logan Killicks nor Joe Starks. Also in Chapter 8, Hurston employs a metaphor for death. Death, according to Janie, is "a strange being" with a sword "waiting for the messenger to bid him come.

Well, if she must eat out of a long-handled spoon, she must A long-handled spoon has a long history in the English language. References to a long-handled spoon are treated in most standard books of quotations. Joe is terminally ill, and the people do not understand the illness. It is much easier for them to accuse Janie of putting a voodoo spell on Joe to hasten his death than it is for them to understand that Joe's condition is helpless.

Ah been feelin' dat somethin' set for still-bait In other words, she is saying that she's feeling like she's the target of the community disapproval, like a bait on a hook that can't move or wriggle as a worm might do. Last summer dat multiplied cock-roach wuz round heah tryin' tuh sell gophers Janie and Pheoby have no time for the charlatan, the "two-headed" doctor, the scheming, self-serving quack. Note the hyperbole "multiplied cock-roach.

It is usually an herb-root mixture alleged to have great power to do whatever the two-headed doctor said it would do. He'd be all right just as soon as the two-headed man found what had been buried against him Hurston discusses this phrase of conjure in Mules and Men. If indeed Janie has "fixed" Joe, then the conjure man has to find out what the "fix" is and where it is buried. His next task would be to concoct something that would counteract the "fix.



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