Human error may have been the cause of the computer glitch that briefly grounded all U.S. airline flights last week. But the incident pointed to deeper challenges of keeping key software up to date.
Over Christmas, I read Whole sentences of its inventive prose still linger in my mind like an afterimage. Yet when Hurston died in 1960, she had been all but forgotten. Until recently, I was not familiar with her life. But a new 鈥淎merican Experience鈥 documentary airing on PBS tonight chronicles Hurston鈥檚 stout resilience despite facing elitism, racism, and sexism.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a way, sometimes in American culture, that people want to perceive Black creativity as just natural and unstudied,鈥 says Tracy Heather Strain, director of in a Zoom interview. 鈥淶ora Neale Hurston is an example of a woman who worked very hard.鈥澛
Hurston, born in Alabama, enrolled in night school at age 26 to complete her high school education. After winning a scholarship to Barnard College of Columbia University, she began studying ethnography. The enterprising student wasn鈥檛 satisfied with leafing through books. Hurston took it upon herself to do firsthand research on folklore in rural Southern Black communities. Yet, because Hurston lacked a Ph.D., her groundbreaking work in anthropology didn鈥檛 receive its due.
鈥淢aybe they saw her as someone to go get the information, but the other people with the credentials would be the ones to analyze and come up with the theories,鈥 says Ms. Strain.
Hurston鈥檚 research informs the backdrop of 鈥淭heir Eyes Were Watching God,鈥 her 1937 novel about a woman鈥檚 search for love and independence. It was sniffily dismissed by luminaries in the Harlem Renaissance movement.
鈥淥ne of the critiques during the time it was published is that it wasn鈥檛 political enough,鈥 says Ms. Strain. 鈥淏ut definitely there鈥檚 gender critiques. There鈥檚 race critiques.鈥
In 1975, Alice Walker campaigned for public recognition of Hurston鈥檚 literary talent. 鈥淭heir Eyes Were Watching God鈥 belatedly became a bestseller. Its protagonist displays the grit that Hurston embodied.
鈥淭he fact that a lot of women have aspirations, and life becomes challenging for them to meet them, is what resonates,鈥 says Ms. Strain. 鈥淚 wish I could have met [Hurston]. She sounds so remarkable and so interesting.鈥