Publication Date

2023

Document Type

Thesis

Committee Members

Crystal B. Lake, Ph.D. (Committee Chair); Andrew Strombeck, Ph.D. (Committee Member); Shengrong Cai, Ph.D. (Committee Member)

Degree Name

Master of Arts (MA)

Abstract

Zora Neale Hurston is an African-American writer, anthropologist, and ethnographer of the Harlem Renaissance. She is distinguished for documenting and celebrating the religions of African Americans in the South. In this study, the author argues that Hurston represents the practiced religions in Southern African-American communities in Jonah’s Gourd Vine and Moses, Man of the Mountain while noticeably omitting Islam, despite the fact that Islam predominated in more Northern African-American Communities as a reclaimed religious history and practice. Hurston’s exclusion prompts inquiries into the history of Islamic erasures in Southern African-American communities and introduces ambiguity in interpreting the metaphors found in Jonah’s Gourd Vine because of the differences between the Biblical and Quranic narratives surrounding the figure of Jonah. The author concludes that Hurston omits Islam because it was not noticeably practiced in the South among the African-American community. Finally, the author argues that Muslim readers must understand the Biblical Jonah to understand the metaphorical meanings of the vine relative to the protagonist John Buddy Pearson in Hurston’s Jonah’s Gourd Vine.

Page Count

40

Department or Program

Department of English Language and Literatures

Year Degree Awarded

2023

ORCID ID

0009-0005-7006-2420


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