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Character Analysis: A Lesson Before Dying

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Spending time in jail can really change a man. In the novel A Lesson Before Dying by award-winning author Ernest J Gaines, the story is about a young man with a challenge of a lifetime. Grant one of the main characters is given a task of changing a man. The novel takes place in Bayonne Louisiana, where the Civil Rights Act has not yet taken place. Segregation was still an issue at this time, and many of the characters throughout the novel face segregation head-on. Grant Wiggins is a teacher in an African American part of town, he teaches at the church and is favored by the community. Grants daunting task is to change Jefferson, a young boy sentenced to death by being in the wrong place at the wrong time. These two characters form a bond and …show more content…

All across the novel, we see Jefferson change as a character, starting off as a dead man to becoming a symbol for those in the community. “‘No Mr. Wiggins I got to go myself”’ (223). Jefferson starts off as if he doesn’t care about death or being alive. Grant teaches him that those things matter and that he is there for Jefferson. Jefferson is showing Grant that he has to be strong and he can go to that chair without Grant. Another instance of bravery is when Paul the police deputy presents the notebook to Grant after the execution. ‘“He was the strongest man in that crowded room, Grant Wiggins”’ (253). Paul saying that Jefferson was the strongest man should have been hard for Grant because Jefferson is gone but it should have also been a compliment because Grant made this happen, he made Jefferson a man and helped him grow as a …show more content…

Jefferson is a young man from Louisiana, he is African American and the book is set pre-Civil Rights movement. Those details can already give the reader some perspective of what will happen. At the beginning of the novel, Jefferson’s own lawyer gives a speech. “‘What justice would there be to take this life?Justice, gentlemen? Why, I would just as soon put a hog in the electric chair as this”’ (8). These powerful words are what shape Jefferson, these words are what makes him believe that he is a lesser person. Some could argue that the lawyer was trying to make a good point. But those words are what gave Grant the job, what made Jefferson a “hog”, and what changes all of the characters. Those words start the novel and they give insight into what people were like earlier. Another example of defying the outcomes is when Grant is teaching Jefferson to rise above what is expected. ‘“I want you to show them the difference between what they think you are and what you can be”’(191). Grant is telling Jefferson to be what no one thought he could be, Grant wants Jefferson to be a man. At the start of the novel Jefferson seems as though he will not change, he will keep his mindset that he is a hog. Throughout the novel Jefferson shows some promising signs of change, he eats his godmother’s food and starts to be grateful for what he has. Then, towards the end of the book, Jefferson really changes he not only becomes a man but he becomes a

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