preview

Character Analysis: A Lesson Before Dying

Better Essays

A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest J. Gaines takes place in 1940’s, a time period of segregation. This was a time when blacks were often at fault for a crime they did not commit, such as what transpired in this book. A man named Jefferson was convicted of a crime he did not commit and was insulted during court. Now his family, friends, and even Jefferson himself were trying to prove the white community wrong about their beliefs that a black man is unequal and lacks dignity against Jefferson and the black community. Not only is Jefferson going through a period of suffering on death row, but others, like Grant Wiggins and Miss Emma, are also facing their struggles and they will try to prove others wrong and redeem themselves through knowledge, …show more content…

He took what was said in court, “Why, I would just as soon put a hog in the electric chair as this,” to heart and now he feels as if he is just an animal (Gaines 8). Miss Emma was unable to come with Grant to visit Jefferson, however, she did send Grant with a plate of food. To which Jefferson responded by saying “You brought me corn...That’s what hogs eat” (Gaines 82). What was said about Jefferson was really digging into his conscience. He did not want to listen to anything that Grant said to him in his efforts to help him because he felt it was worthless since he was going to die anyway. He even went as far to eat without hands on the floor and sticking his head in the bag and ate, along with making sounds like a hog (Gaines 83). Jefferson is much like the father in The Road by Cormac McCarthy in that at times they both just felt that they should give up. Even though their situations may have been seen as completely different, they both felt as if there was no purpose in trying anymore. Not only did this cause suffering for Jefferson, but so did the fact that he was being put to death. As Ernest Gaines said “What did a person go through that week before, the day before, the night before he was to die? What was in his mind?” ("NEA Big Read: Meet Ernest Gaines"). Jefferson must have had numerous thoughts that had been running through his mind awaiting his execution and being called a hog added to these …show more content…

It was redemption for the black community as a whole. This was a way of letting the white community know that they are all human. It was a way of showing them that the black community is intelligent and not the animals that they think they are. If it did not prove anything to the white community, it did show something to the black community that had doubted Grant’s efforts. It made them realize that they have the power to stand up for themselves just like Jefferson did. As stated in Manhood in A Lesson Before Dying, “Jefferson does feel that he has experienced a change in identity by the novel's end, and that change is made possible through his and the black community's appropriation of social institutions and of myths and ideologies” (Auger 75). It similar to The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway in which Jake Barnes manages to “live life all the way up” by following the values the Count Mippipopolous had taught him about, love, passion, and living life all the way up (Hemingway 67). The redemption in this novel is displayed by the black community trying to prove to the white community that they can’t be treated the way they are being treated and that they won’t let it hurt them, but empower

Get Access