A Lesson Befor Dying
Essay Preview: A Lesson Befor Dying
Report this essay
Although Gaines uses first-person narration (the story is told from Grants perspective), readers are not limited to Grants point of view. Gaines has said that using a narrator who reports events as others reveal them (note Grants oft-repeated remark, “I learned later . . .”) is one of the narrative devices he uses to get inside his characters heads without resorting to omniscient (third-person) narration. Much of the action in the novel occurs on a psychological rather than a physical level. Although we “hear” Grants voice, the novel is ultimately Jeffersons story.While the story of Lesson focuses on Jeffersons trial and execution, the plot focuses on the struggles of poor, oppressed people to gain a measure of pride and dignity within a hostile, racist environment. The novel begins with Jeffersons trial, moves briefly back into the immediate past to reconstruct the events surrounding Alcee Gropйs murder, and then moves relentlessly forward, culminating in Jeffersons execution. Along the way, we witness life in the black, segregated community of Bayonne, which, although it appears to go on without interruption, is deeply affected by Jeffersons impending death. Consequently, we realize that Jeffersons execution, which is generally perceived as a distasteful but necessary task by the majority of the white community, is an occasion for much sorrow and grief for the black community.
Setting — both physical and psychological — plays a key role in Lesson. The novel is set in the fictional community of Bayonne, Louisiana, in the pre-Civil Rights South. Much of the beauty and power of Gaines writing derives from his ability to re-create a sense of place and to transport his readers back to life on a Louisiana sugar cane plantation during the pre-Civil Rights era. Although Gaines rejects all efforts to label him as primarily a black writer, a Southern writer,