Biography of Zora Neale Hurston .
            
	The quotation on her tombstone, "A Genius of the South" is an understatement.
            
(Dickenson). Zora Neale Hurston is more than a genius. She is an inspiration to all kinds of.
            
people, but primarily African Americans.
            
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	She was born on 7 January 1891 in Notasulga, Alabama, but soon after, she .
            
moved to Eatonville, Florida. Many people think that this was her place of birth, but it is .
            
not. Most of her ideas for her writings come from her struggles while living in Eatonville. .
            
(Dickenson) .
            
	.
            
	Hurston's mother, Lucy Hurston, died in 1904, and she took a dislike to her .
            
stepmother. As a result, she left home and joined a traveling theatre company. This was the .
            
beginning of Hurston's education and future writing career. (Dickenson).
            
	After leaving home, Hurston ended up at Morgan Academy where she finished .
            
high school. In 1920, she enrolled in Howard University. After about a year, Hurston's .
            
first piece of work was published. In 1921, Howard University's literary magazine .
            
published one of  her stories. She received more recognition later when another story .
            
appeared in the New York Magazine Opportunity. Hurston won second place in the .
            
Opportunity contest and, after lots of encouragement, moved to New York. (Dickenson).
            
	One of Hurston's earliest pieces of works was the play Mule Bone which she "wrote with .
            
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Langston Hughes." (Dickenson) The two disagreed over ownership though and charged                                                 .
            
one another with plagiarism. (Byrd) In 1934, Hurston published Jonah's Gourd Vine, .
            
her first novel, which was based on two people who were like her parents. In 1935, she .
            
published a book of collected  tales entitled Mules and Men. In 1937, the most powerful .
            
novel Hurston has ever written, Their Eyes Were Watching God was published. .
            
(Dickenson) It is now one of the most widely studied novels in American Literature, though .