Highlighting Black Writers: Zora Neale Hurston

    Zora Neale Hurston was an anthropologist and writer.  Hurston was from Alabama and often wrote about what life was like in the South. Both of her parents were slaves at one time but they moved to Eatonville, Florida. Hurston graduated high school and went to Howard for college. While in school Zora was able to create a school newspaper. She later went to Bernard College and got her BA in anthropology. When she was in New York attending Bernard College she met  two other writers,  Langston Hughes and Countee Cullen. They were all apart of the Black Renaissance. Hurston was really dedicated to studying black culture outside of writing. She traveled and studied different culture in places like Jamaica and Haiti. It was noted that  she utilized her research in some of her fictional work. One of her most popular books was Their Eyes Were Watching God.  Hurston also wrote short stories and plays. She often wrote narratives about black women and what their lives entailed. Some of her work was overlooked at the time by the mainstream media. In the later years of her life she enjoyed being a theater teacher. I really liked learning about Zora Neale Hurston and find it extremely inspiring that she pushed through the obstacles that impacted black women writers at that time. 

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