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A Lesson Before Dying Analysis

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Throughout history and in literature, black has always been portrayed as evil, whereas white has represented purity and light. These oversimplified stereotypes of something abstract as skin color has plagued our culture with racism and hatred. “A lesson before dying”, by Ernest J. Gaines tells a story that is set during late 1940’s. It in detail contradicts racism and in-justice throughout the novel. The story is focused on the interaction between Jefferson, a young and illiterate African American man, who is sentenced to death for an unjust crime, and Grant Wiggins, a teacher that wants to help Jefferson, but doesn’t know how. Grant Wiggins has been teaching on a manor outside Bayonne, Louisiana, for a few years when a moderate witted man named Jefferson is convicted of murder and sentenced to death. Jefferson claims he is innocent. He says he was headed to a bar, however altered his opinion and chose to tag along with two men who were on their way to an alcohol store. Upon arriving there, the two men started contending with the storeowner, and a shootout followed. The storeowner and the two men died, and Jefferson remained at the scene of the crime. He was arrested and tried for homicide. Jefferson's attorney contends in court that Jefferson is only a poor fool, barely more …show more content…

Gaines does an exquisite job of describing thoroughly the pain of enduring those issues. The relationship between social structure and race is one that numerous individuals can't see or are apparently unaware of, on the grounds that it is not evident to us, particularly those of the white race. It is intriguing to consider the points of interest that corresponds with being of the white race and the impacts it has on social structure, and on others races, predominately ethnic

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