Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Hurston, Zora Neale - Kathryn Lee Seidel (essay date 1991)
Hurston, Zora Neale - Kathryn Lee Seidel (essay date 1991)
Kathryn Lee Seidel (essay date 1991)
SOURCE: Seidel, Kathryn Lee. “The Artist in the Kitchen: The Economics of Creativity in Hurston's ‘Sweat’.” In Zora in Florida, edited by Steve Glassman and Kathryn Lee Seidel, pp. 110-20. Orlando: University of Central Florida Press, 1991.
[In the following essay, Seidel asserts that “Sweat” is valuable for its depiction of the economic situation in Eatonville, Florida, in the early decades of the twentieth century as well as its “harsh, unrelenting indictment of the economic and personal degradation of marriage in a racist and sexist society.”]
Zora Neal Hurston's short story “Sweat” (1926) presents a radical transformation of an oppressed black domestic worker who attempts to envision her work as a work of art. The story is remarkable in Hurston's body of work for its harsh, unrelenting indictment of the economic and personal degradation of marriage in a racist and sexist...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Cheryl A. Wall (essay date winter 1989)
- Mary Katherine Wainwright (essay date 1991)
- Kathryn Lee Seidel (essay date 1991)
- D. A. Boxwell (essay date winter 1992)
- Evora W. Jones (essay date March 1992)
- Rosan Augusta Jordan (essay date 1992)
- David G. Hale (essay date summer 1993)
- Myles Raymond Hurd (essay date fall 1993)
- Suzanne D. Green (essay date fall-winter 1994)
- Nancy Chinn and Elizabeth E. Dunn (essay date fall 1996)
- Adrianne R. Andrews (essay date 1997)
- Elizabeth Jane Harrison (essay date 1997)
- Neal A. Lester (essay date spring 1998)
- Susan Edwards Meisenhelder (essay date 1999)
- David Todd Lawrence (essay date 2000)
- Laurie Champion (essay date fall 2001)
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