Home > A Lesson before Dying Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Dying like a Man: A Novel about Race and Dignity in the South
A Lesson before Dying | Dying like a Man: A Novel about Race and Dignity in the South
In the following review of A Lesson Before
Dying, Senna emphasizes Gaines’s ability to evoke
the social climate of the South in the 1940s and its
foreshadowing of the 1960s Civil Rights movement.
Near the end of Ernest J. Gaines’s novel A Lesson Before Dying, set in the fictional town of Bayonne, Louisiana, in 1948, a white sheriff tells a condemned black man to write in his diary that he has been fairly treated. Although the prisoner assents, nothing could be farther from the truth in that squalid segregated jail, which is an extension of the oppressive Jim Crow world outside.
A black primary school teacher, Grant Wiggins, narrates the story of Jefferson, the prisoner, whose resignation to his execution lends credence to the lesson of Grant’s own teacher,...
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- A Lesson before Dying: Introduction
- A Lesson before Dying: Summary
- A Lesson before Dying: Ernest J. Gaines Biography
- A Lesson before Dying: Themes
- A Lesson before Dying: Style
- A Lesson before Dying: Historical Context
- A Lesson before Dying: Critical Overview
- A Lesson before Dying: Character Analysis
- A Lesson before Dying: Essays and Criticism
- A Lesson before Dying: Topics for Further Study
- A Lesson before Dying: Media Adaptations
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