Zora Neale Hurston and the Curious Power of One
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. On Cognitive Justice and Monocultures of Knowledge
I knew that something needed to be done. That was my place in the world, my story—the story of myself, the story of my people. I was already familiar with stories of different people…having an English education and encountering accounts and events and people. At some point, I began to miss my own. Think of it as a gap in the bookshelf as though a book had been taken out.
It was the genius of the Negro which had invented the steam engine, the cotton gin, the air brake, and numerous other things—but the conniving white men had seen the Negro’s inventions and run off and put them into practice before the Negro had a chance to do anything about it. Thus the white man got credit for what the genius of the Negro brain had produced. Were it not for the envy and greed of the white man, the Negro would hold his rightful place—the noblest and the greatest man on earth. The people listening would cheer themselves hoarse and go home feeling good. Over the fences next day it would be agreed that it was a wonderful speech, and nothing but the God’s truth. What a great people we would be if we only had our rights!5(Hurston, 1942, p. 181)
3. A Crow in a Pigeon’s Nest
Grown people know that they do not always know the why of things, and even if they think they know, they do not know where and how they got proof. Hence the irritation they show when children keep on demanding to know if a thing is so and how the grown folks got the proof of it. It is so troublesome because it is disturbing to the pigeon-hole way of life. […] It was told to the old folks and that had been enough for them, or to put it in Negro idiom, nobody didn’t tell ‘em, but they heard. So there must be something wrong with a child that questions the gods of pigeon-holes. I was always asking and making myself a crow in a pigeon’s nest. I was full of curiosity like many other children, and like them I was as unconscious of the sanctity of statuary as a flock of pigeons around a palace.(Hurston, 1942, pp. 25–26)
Understanding Banalities
lack of curiosity about the internal lives and emotions of the Negro, and for that matter, any non-Anglo-Saxon peoples within our borders, above the class of unskilled labor. This lack of interest is much more important than it seems at first glance. It is even more important at this time than it was in the past. The internal affairs of the nation have bearing on the international stress and strain, and this gap in the national literature now has tremendous weight in world affairs. National coherence and solidarity is implicit in a thorough understanding of the various groups within a nation, and this lack of knowledge about the internal emotions and behaviors of the minorities cannot fail to bar out understanding. Man, like all the other animals, fears and is repelled by that which he does not understand, and mere difference is apt to connote something malign. […] Argue all you will or may about injustice, but as long as the majority cannot conceive of a Negro or a Jew feeling and reacting inside just as they do, the majority will keep right on believing that people who do not look like them cannot possibly feel as they do, and conform to the established pattern. It is well known that there must be a body of waived matter, let us say, things accepted and taken for granted by all in a community before there can be that commonality of feeling. The usual phrase is having things in common. Until this is thoroughly established in respect to the Negro in America, as well as of other minorities, it will remain impossible for the majority to conceive of a Negro experiencing a deep and abiding love and not just the passion of sex.(Hurston, 1950/2022, pp. 143, 146)
4. The Crow and the Pigeons
On Placing Non-Academic Black Pigeons in the Academic White Pigeon’s Nest
I was glad when somebody told me, “You may go and collect Negro folklore.” In a way it would not have been a new experience for me. When I pitched headforemost into the world I landed in the crib of negroism. From the earliest rocking of my cradle, I had known about the capers Brer Rabbit is apt to cut and what the Squinch Owl says from the house top. But it was fitting me like a tight chemise. I couldn’t see for wearing it. It was only when I was off in college, away from my native surrounding, that I could see myself like somebody else and stand off and look at my garment. Then I had to have the spy-glass of Anthropology to look through at that.(Hurston, 1935/1990, p. 1)
Folklore is not as easy to collect as it sounds. The best source is where there are the least outside influences and these people, being usually underprivileged, are the shyest. They are most reluctant at times to reveal that which the soul lives by. And the Negro in spite of his open-faced laughter, his seeming acquiescence, is particularly evasive. You see we are a polite people and we do not say to our questioner, “Get out of here!” We smile and tell him or her something that satisfies the white person because, knowing so little about us he doesn’t know what he is missing. The Indian resists curiosity by a stony silence. The Negro offers a feather-bed resistance. That is, we let the probe enter, but it never comes out. It gets smothered under a lot of laughter and pleasantries. The theory behind our tactics: the white man is always trying to know into somebody else’s business. All right, I’ll set something outside the door of my mind for him to play with and handle. He can read my writing but he sho’ can’t read my mind. I’ll put this play toy in his hand, and he will seize it and go away. Then I’ll say my say and sing my song.(Hurston, 1935/1990, pp. 2–3)
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| HBCU | Historically Black Colleges and Universities |
| PWIs | Predominately White Institutions |
| 1 | See (Rountree, 2024) as this article comes from this larger, more comprehensive work that expounds on concepts and ideas briefly touched upon in this document. This document is meant to serve as an introductory piece, thereby opening additional opportunities for future publications. |
| 2 | Visvanathan’s book (Visvanathan, 1997). See Bell (1992); Hansberry (1969/2011); Combahee River Collective (1974/2015); A. J. Cooper (1892/2016); Du Bois (1903/1994); M. L. King (1968/2010); Langton Hughes, “The Negro Speaks of Rivers; Frederick Douglass, “What is the Fourth of July to a Slave?;” Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, “Learning to Read;” Nikki Giovanni, “Ego Trippin; June Jordan, “Poem about My Rights;” “Etheridge Knight, “The Idea of Ancestry;” Pinkie Gordon Lane, “On Being Head of the English Department,” Audre Lorde, “A Litany for Survival;” Paulo Freire, The Pedagogy of the Oppressed. |
| 3 | Forthcoming is (Rountree, 2026) which illuminates the impact of democracy on Black women. |
| 4 | See also (Gray White, 2021, p. A-21), Plessy v. Ferguson decision. |
| 5 | Thank you RR3 for naming Elijah McCoy and Granville Woods, whose Black genius improved inventions but remain unnamed. Hurston is highlighting the overarching reality that regardless of their contributions, Black genius is overlooked because Whiteness must be positioned as superior, even when that is not the case. |
| 6 | Hurston first wrote and published an article about Kossola Oluale in 1927 for the Journal of Negro History (Hurston, 1927), a publication under the auspices of Dr. Carter G. Woodson. She writes at length about her encounter with Oluale in Dust Tracks on a Road (Hurston, 1942, pp. 164–168). In chapter six of “A Crow in a Pigeon’s Nest”: Zora Neale Hurston, Black Scholarship, and the Fields of Peace and Conflict Resolution, I expound on claims that Hurston plagiarized Langdon Roche’s (1914) Historic Sketches of the South. Thank you to RR3 for reminding me of “Drenched in Light.” See Toni Morrison and Alice Walker’s further explanation of what it means for Black feminist authors to write for Black audiences, thereby not mentioning White people. |
| 7 | There are a few ways to analyze Hurston’s works, including the passages used in this article. For the purpose of this article, age and race will always factor into the analysis, given Hurston’s intersectional existence; therefore, it goes without saying, references to “old folks” and “grown people” are not solely about their relationship to children, but because this article speaks directly to the academic space, it is more about the tenure hierarchy and time within a department or field, rather than title and rank. |
| 8 | The label of unproblematic or child who flies under the radar is not a slight and not meant to cause offense. It is a cliché identifier that allows readers to cognitively participate in discourse about difference. Therefore, it is the token and hypervisible student may also be unproblematic to their teachers, but not to other students, thereby making them a target. |
| 9 | |
| 10 | Cooper builds her argument on the work of Anna Julia Cooper and highlights the lives of three other Black “race” women. |
| 11 | Hurston compares her childhood experiences in her all-Black hometown of Eatonville, Florida, with those in the predominantly White city of Jacksonville, Florida, where she describes her years there as being “thrown against a sharp white background,” as a hypervisible token (Hurston, 2022b). In “How It Feels to Be Colored Me,” she writes that in Eatonville, while they (her community) “deplored any joyful tendencies in me…I was their Zora nevertheless. I belonged to them…everybody’s Zora” (Hurston, 2022b, p. 187). Put another way, even though she differed from others, she never felt out of place; more than that, she was secure in her belonging to the community because of her peculiarities. In contrast, in Jacksonville, the distant dynamic Hurston had with some White people—those who “rode through the town [Eatonville] but never lived there” becomes more exaggerated through a further reflection that these people never seemed genuinely interested in comprehending anything substantial about Hurston specifically or Black people generally because they were, in her assessment, always passing by (Hurston, 1924/2020; 1942, p. 187). Hurston identifies that some White people have a normative way of being, especially when it comes to circumventing direct engagement or investment in Black people. See also (Hurston, 1924/2020). |
| 12 | See (Rountree, 2024) Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s contention that Americans dwell in an entangled dilemma. The solution to the dilemma lies in an ontological challenge of overcoming the distinct epistemological knowledge that acts as both source and cause of the dilemma. He writes, “It is impossible for white Americans to grasp the depth and dimension of the Negro dilemma without understanding what it means to be a Negro in America… for there’s very little in the life and experience of white America that can compare to the curse this society has put on color. And yet, if the present chasm of hostility, fear and distrust is to be bridged, the white man must begin to walk in the pathways of his black brothers and feel some of the pain and hurt that throb without letup in their daily lives” (J. M. King, 1967/2010, p. 109). The source and cause of the dilemma first requires White Americans to overcome the perceived impossibility of understanding what it means to be Black in America. King seems to write this essay to moderate White Americans in a similar way he challenges them in “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” (1964). He identifies them as “white Americans,” a distinguishing feature that differs from being a “Negro in America.” With this word selection, King reaffirms the second-class citizenry, which defines the depths and dimensions of the dilemma facing People of African descent: identity and place. He addresses those who had not considered any aspect of what it means to be Black in America until they witnessed the Greenville or Nashville sit-ins or found themselves confronted with images from Birmingham. Of these moderates, he asks them to, if for the first time, allow the realities of race to cross their minds. He deliberately reassures White people that they will always be Americans while questioning why Black people will always be ‘in America.’ |
| 13 | See works written by Black feminist historians Daina Ramey Berry, Leslie M. Harris, and Kali Nicole Gross. |
| 14 | More than that, this sideshow performance-type spectacle is familiar to Hurston because it is a role she embodied for White people who passed through her Black hometown of Eatonville (Hurston, 1924/2020, 1942, pp. 70–710). |
| 15 | Finley and Martin cite Euro-American sociologist George Ritzer’s definition of religion and argue Whiteness is a religion because it is a “social phenomenon that consists of beliefs about the sacred; the experiences, practices, and rituals that reinforce those beliefs; and the communities that share similar beliefs and practices,” and in the United States, this social phenomenon is directly linked to the values associated with and guaranteed to members of the dominant racial group. These values and ideals, which are considered sacred to the “religious” White person, rely explicitly upon their perception of Blackness as an affront (read: sin) to their (and others) Whiteness. Thus, when describing spaces and places initially and intentionally dedicated to White people, the introduction of Blackness into those spaces and places becomes viewed as a hindrance to White values and ideas like freedom, justice, and fairness as constructed upon their perception of Blackness and sacredness. |
| 16 | Citing Mullings’ 2013 AAA Presidential Address. |
| 17 | See also (Hurston, 1924/2020), which presents a perspective on value as Hurston reflects on Black girlhood. |
| 18 | Drylongso describes the ordinary Black person without confining everyone to a monolithic belief pattern. |
| 19 | Collaboration is not limited to interpersonal dialogue; therefore, it includes citation practices, referencing, cataloging, etc. |
| 20 | When I first read “We are not named”: Black women and the politics of citation in anthropology,’ the wheels began rolling toward better understanding and advocating for citational politics, decolonization, and cognitive justice. See also L. Bolles (2013); F. V. Harrison (1995, 2010); Mullings (1997). |
| 21 | Bolles is specifically speaking about her field of anthropology. |
| 22 | Our presence is necessary because there has been too significant an absence for far too long. Moreover, I do not take my position in anthropology as a discipline or peace and conflict resolution as a field or the work of foregrounding Hurston outside of anthropology and literature lightly. Writing this has been a reflexive process, and as such, I hope it becomes a source of encouragement for other Black women interdisciplinary scholars that even as our journeys differ, I see you and recognize our similarities. |
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Rountree, A.S. Zora Neale Hurston and the Curious Power of One. Humans 2026, 6, 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans6010011
Rountree AS. Zora Neale Hurston and the Curious Power of One. Humans. 2026; 6(1):11. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans6010011
Chicago/Turabian StyleRountree, Ajanet S. 2026. "Zora Neale Hurston and the Curious Power of One" Humans 6, no. 1: 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans6010011
APA StyleRountree, A. S. (2026). Zora Neale Hurston and the Curious Power of One. Humans, 6(1), 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans6010011

