Free Term Papers on A Lesson Before Dying

OPPapers.com Essay Index >> Book Reports >> A Lesson Before Dying

We have many free term papers and essays on A Lesson Before Dying. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.

Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. A Lesson Before Dying

    A Lesson Before Dying. A Lesson Before Dying I thought that the book A
    Lesson Before Dying was all right overall. I think Ernest ...

  2. A Lesson Before Dying

    A Lesson Before Dying. A Lesson Before Dying I thought that the book A
    Lesson Before Dying was all right overall. I think Ernest ...

  3. A Lesson Before Dying

    a lesson before dying. Love and Family Relationships In A Lesson Before Dying,
    Mr. Grant Wiggins' life crises were the center of the story. ...

  4. A Lesson Before Dying

    A Lesson Before Dying. ... Several characters in Ernest Gaines' A Lesson Before
    Dying experienced this, particularly Jefferson and Grant. ...

  5. A Lesson Before Dying Critique

    a lesson before dying critique. ... Vancil initiates the criticism of A lesson Before
    Dying in an old-fashioned, excessive religious genre of attitudes. ...

View More Papers...

A Lesson Before Dying

Submitted by PACIFICBLAZE3 on February 20, 2006

Category: Book Reports
Words: 707 | Pages: 3
Views: 211
Popularity Rank: 49,437
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Ultimately Making Better Men

In A Lesson Before Dying, a novel written by award winning author Ernest Gaines, an unexpected relationship develops between a black man who was at the “wrong place, wrong time” and was wrongly accused of murder, and a teacher who returns to his hometown and finds himself being persecuted. The man wrongly accused of murder is Jefferson, and the teacher is Grant.
Jefferson’s own lawyer refers to Jefferson as a hog, when he says “Why I would just as soon put a hog in the electric chair” (Gaines 7). His lawyer also refers to him as “a cornered animal to strike quickly out of fear” (Gaines 7). Later in the story, it is seen that Jefferson internalizes that portrayal of him. He actually ends up acting like the animal the lawyer characterizes him to be. He even starts thinking of himself as a “nonhuman”. He asks for the corn to eat because that’s what hogs eat” (Gaines 82). When he is offered candy, he states “hogs don’t eat no candy” (Gaines 83). He even ended up eating like a hog: “he knelt down on the floor and put his head inside the bag and started eating, without using his hands. He even sounded like a hog” (Gaines 83).
Another pattern that occurs when Miss Emma, Jefferson’s godmother asks that Grant go visit Jefferson in jail and make a man out of him: “I want the teacher visit my boy. I want the teacher make him know that he’s not a hog, he’s a man” (Gaines 20 to 21). Miss Emma wants Jefferson to know that he is not the foolish, worthless animal his lawyer made him out to be, but that he is a human being with feelings, who counts for something in this world. Grant is then sent to the jail to try and make Jefferson a “man” before he dies. Ultimately, not only does Grant end up making a man out of Jefferson, but Jefferson makes an even better man out of Grant as well.
When they both first met, Jefferson thinks he is nothing but a hog, and grant is ill tempered, bitter, and selfish. He hates the...

You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!