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Toni Cade Bambara's The Lesson : Book Analysis

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To progress in society, one needs knowledge to further themselves. If one does not gain a good foundation for that knowledge, society will leave them behind. There are certain obstacles that prevent others from pursuing an education such as an inability to access a place of learning, not getting good education from teachers, or just flat out quitting school to make easy money by joining a gang. In Gwendolyn Brooks, “We Real Cool,” seven delinquents quit school to engage in rebellious behavior and in Toni Cade Bambara’s “The Lesson,” a teacher takes several underprivileged children to a high-class toy shop. By using point of view, diction, and symbolism, Gwendolyn Brooks and Tone Cade Bambara show the reader why it is important to learn …show more content…

The stories would not have the same effect if they were from anyone else’s perspective as they put the reader in place of people who are uneducated. The seven players lack of education serves as their downfall, while the reader learns with Sylvia through Miss Moore’s lesson. Furthermore, Due to their attitudes towards learning the protagonists speak in an uneducated diction. The seven players use incorrect grammar and only use one syllable words. This is exemplified with the phrase, “We Strike Straight” (Brooks). Bambara draws attention to the protagonists’ lack of education which brings about their early deaths. The seven players talk as though they are cool, but their word choices make them sound like dullards. Literary scholar, Barbara B. Sims, suggests the seven players lives as undesirable: “At once their defiant and complacent attitudes seem quite pathetic, and the reader wonders whom the cool people are trying to kid about the desirability of their disordered lives.” Presenting the seven players as moronic dropouts allows the reader to see them in a negative light. Likewise, Sylvia’s use of vulgar language gives the reader an idea of her intelligence. Sylvia is annoyed with the neighborhood’s mothers, referencing how they “were in a la-de-da apartment up the block having a good ole time” (Bambara). Their mothers are probably prostitutes, but Sylvia’s word choice leads the reader to believe that

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