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Objective. To encourage participants to think critically about literature.To provide a clear analysis of the assigned reading.To help diversify participants' reading interest and enhance their reading foundation.. About the Author, Ernest Gaines. Born 1933. About the Author, Ernest Gaines. Birthplace: a plantation in Oscar (Pointe Coupe Parrish), Louisiana, in 1933. He continues to reside there.Childhood: Spent on the River Lake Plantation in Louisiana.Family: Five generations of his30437
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1. A Lesson Before Dying A Novel by
Ernest J. Gaines
2. Objective To encourage participants to think critically about literature.
To provide a clear analysis of the assigned reading.
To help diversify participants reading interest and enhance their reading foundation.
3. About the Author, Ernest Gaines Born 1933
4. About the Author, Ernest Gaines Birthplace: a plantation in Oscar (Pointe Coupe Parrish), Louisiana, in 1933. He continues to reside there.
Childhood: Spent on the River Lake Plantation in Louisiana.
Family: Five generations of his family lived at River Lake Plantation.
Teen years: Relocated to California when he was fifteen years old to continue his education and live with his parents who had gone their to find employment. 2
5. About the Author, Ernest Gaines (cont.) Early Education: The Black Quarter school in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana.
College education: San Francisco State College and Stanford University (writing fellowship). 2
Earliest Publications: Catherine Carmier (1964); Of Love and Dust (1967); and Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1971). 2
Most Celebrated Publications:
-- Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1971): Brought Gaines to the literary forefront and won the Commonwealth of California gold medal for fiction and was made into a TV movie. 2
-- A Gathering of Old Men (1983): Won the Common Wealth of California gold medal for fiction.2
6. A Lesson Before Dying (1993) Winner, 1993 National Book Critics Circle Award
7. Ernest J. Gaines, in his own words:
We all know--at least intellectually--that we're going [to die]. The difference is being told, 'Okay, it's tomorrow at 10 a.m.' How do you react to that? How do you face it? That, it seems to me, is the ultimate test of life.1
Though the places in my stories and novels are imaginary ones, they are based pretty much on the place where I grew up and the surrounding areas where I worked, went to school, and traveled as a child. My characters speak the way people speak in that area." 1 About A Lesson Before Dying (1993)
8. Historical Framework forreading A Lesson Before Dying A Lesson Before Dying was published in 1993. However, the plot (sequence of events) is set in the 1940s, at a fictional Plantation Parrish located in the Deep South, and specifically, in the state of Louisiana.
This novel attempts to depict the authentic character and spirit of the era in which the plot is set. It infuses vernacular and some local color elements to help create an authentic reading experience.
9. Historical Framework forreading A Lesson Before Dying (cont) The events of this novel occur during times of racial segregation or what is referred to as the Jim Crow era. The plot of this story also occurs after the period referred to as The Harlem Renaissance.
As an aside: The Harlem Renaissance, was also known as the New Negro Renaissance and the New Negro Movement. Renaissance means birth. The Harlem Renaissance peaked between 1920 and the early 1930s.
As black literacy improved, artistic expression became a means for black intellectuals to rebel against poverty, racism, and stereotypes of black culture and encourage black communities to examine shared values and commit to achieving shared goals.
The 1940s then was an era in which black intellectuals began to boldly criticized the disparities between blacks and whites. In the novel, the black college-educated characters who are themselves teachers grapple with these disparities personally and professionally.
10. Historical Framework forreading A Lesson Before Dying (cont) Some themes addressed in the novel include:
-- Religion
-- Vernacular (everyday language of a people) -
-- Alcoholism
-- Marital Discord (Adultery, Divorce)
-- Parenting
-- Misogyny (Disrespect toward women of all colors)
-- Employment Limitations for Black Americans, for the educated, undereducated, and uneducated
-- Classism, Economics and Poverty
-- Education (Literacy and Illiteracy)
-- Capital Punishment / Criminal Justice
-- Racism / Intra-cultural Racism
-- Human Respect / Equality
-- Liberation (Escape) vs. Captivity
11. Discussion of the Book Ask Yourself . . .
Who Learns a Lesson? Identify the student(s) or audience.
What Lesson is taught? Identify the theme(s).
At what point in the Story does Jefferson or you as a reader/student learn the Lesson? Do you have an epiphany?
OR
What is the Lesson that not only the
condemned man, Jefferson, learns before
dying, but the lesson that all readers should
glean from this story?
12. THE END Reading Initiative Coordinator: Mrs. Eleanor Lee, Dean of First Year Studies
Trio Director: Mrs. Mary Griffin
Student Support Services Director: Ms. Buffie Alloway
Presentation PPT prepared by Rebecca C. Money, English/Reading Specialist
Troy University
Student Support Services
Center for Student Success
109 Shackelford Hall Annex
Troy, AL 36082