International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research

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A Widely Indexed Open Access Peer Reviewed Multidisciplinary Bi-monthly Scholarly International Journal

Call for Paper Volume 8, Issue 2 (March-April 2026) Submit your research before last 3 days of April to publish your research paper in the issue of March-April.

From Folklore to Freedom: The Postcolonial Dimensions of Zora Neale Hurston’s Jonah’s Gourd Vine

Author(s) Ms. SOFIA L, Dr. SATHYA DEVI K
Country India
Abstract The paper examines Zora Neale Hurston’s first novel, Jonah’s Gourd Vine (1934), which has been little read and overshadowed by the later Their Eyes Were Watching God but is deeply important to both African American and postcolonial literary studies. This novel focused on the ascendance and undoing of preacher John Buddy Pearson; it dramatizes African American life in the post-reconstruction South while foregrounding the aftereffects of slavery and racial subjugation as colonial residues that shape identity, community and cultural expression. This paper also brings together different critical ideas from postcolonial thinkers like Edward Said, Gayatri Spivak, and Homi Bhabha, connecting them to themes like the lasting effects of colonialism, local resistance, mixed religious practices, and the voices of marginalised groups (Bhabha, 1994). Through her deliberate use of African American vernacular, African American folklore, and oral traditions, Hurston’s novel is resisting the homogenizing demands of Western literary and religious authority by placing its system of signification as a counter-discourse to colonial erasure. The preacher’s pendulum between spiritual guidance and personal collapse allegorizes the tortuous navigation of freedom within infrastructures still possessed by rule, while women and community figures personify grit and cultural survival. Comparative readings place Hurston in conversation with George Lamming, Jean Rhys, and Chinua Achebe, highlighting common preoccupations with hybridity, identity, and resistance throughout the diaspora (Achebe, 1958). As such, Jonah’s Gourd Vine operates not simply as regional fiction but as postcolonial intervention, reclaiming African American subjectivity and asserting Hurston’s place in global decolonizing literature.
Keywords Postcolonial theory, African American vernacular, Folklore and oral tradition, Colonial legacy, Diaspora identity, Subaltern voices
Field Sociology > Linguistic / Literature
Published In Volume 8, Issue 2, March-April 2026
Published On 2026-03-11
DOI https://doi.org/10.36948/ijfmr.2026.v08i02.70853

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