Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Hurston, Zora Neale (Vol. 30) - Lillie P. Howard
Hurston, Zora Neale (Vol. 30) - Lillie P. Howard
LILLIE P. HOWARD
There is no indication that Zora N. Hurston was ever well known—as a writer or as a person—among the masses during her lifetime. With an impressive group of people—the elitists—on the other hand, she enjoyed brief periods of notoriety…. While a few lampoon her for what they consider her lack of social consciousness, her tendency to transcend racism and prejudices by disallowing them a major role in her works, and for technical and narrative deficiences in her fiction, most praise her for her ability to tell a good story well, for her vivid and unforgettable figurative language, for her staunch individualism, and for the sense of "racial health" that permeates her fiction. (p. 170)
Hurston was undeniably before her time…. [She] was a black nationalist when black nationalists were being discredited and deported. What really made her premature, however, was all the beauty and struggle of Their Eyes Were Watching God where...
[The entire page is 435 words long]
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- Introduction
- Fannie Hurst
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