Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Hurston is a novel about the search for love and asserts James Baldwin's Black English as they used American English occasionally and by separating the Black and American English.
"Their Eyes Were Watching God" is a book about identity and describes the importance of racial identity as Hurston is mixed and had a hard time. When she left and discovered her true identity she realized the importance of equality and personal development. She felt the importance to have her identity recognized.
This novel demonstrates the assertion of Baldwin in the essay about Black English to be a distinct and separate language as Hurston used American English only occasionally and felt that people should be committed to their root language.
She separated American English and Black English in her novel and connected it with the identity issue and supports Baldwin's claims about the English language is spoken by blacks more than Americans.
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