A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest J. Gaines

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A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest J. Gaines

Vancil initiates the criticism of A lesson Before Dying in an old-fashioned, excessive religious genre of attitudes. He claims that Grant Wiggins is reluctant to atonement for guilt to uphold the Christian faith belief system within the Quarters, the small community of Wiggins’ residence. Wiggins has just evolved into the Diaspora of African-American people whose adapted a new way of thought and forever changing lifestyle alterations ranging from the southern to western regions in America. It may not be in complete agreement and acceptance by the matriarchs and patriarchs of the community but it progresses into a unique character identification tool for oneself. Black Americans were unwillingly detached from the true African tribal culture and therefore must attempt to gain a bountiful knowledge on one’s own heritage, current, and future life expectancies for the average home grown man or woman.

Vancil narrates that Wiggins is “immersed in his own concerns and relates to his community from a perspective of superiority, a superiority as much bestowed as felt.”(489) Grant does not conduct his reasoning and underlying mentality as a higher status than all of the other community members in every illicit situation. It is not wrong to possess pride and matured culture for being a recipient of a fine education for a young Black man residing in Louisiana. He simply wants more than what a contained, prejudice society can offer him or his counterparts. His beliefs are further justified when Jefferson is convicted and sentenced to death for a murder not capable by an innocent man. Grant boasts out that Jefferson was educated in the community’s school system but the power of the finer ...

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...life of Jefferson who has now left the spirit of a hog and emerged into a revitalized man. Vancil concludes that miracles and an exorcism appear in the novel detailing a swine evolving into a man throughout Jefferson’s metamorphosis. Vancil may be utilizing Gaines work too literally because evil spirits were never within Jefferson’s spirit, only a lack of strong manhood, pride, and self esteem. The nature of morale and religion is complex among a wide array of individuals. Tante Lou and Miss Emma firmly backed their Christian beliefs and greatly duplicated the real beliefs of many women and men of that time who found their identifying culture through an attachment of Christianity. Vancil, David E. “Redemption According to Ernest Gaines.” In A Lesson Before Dying in African American Review 28, no.3 (1994) 489-491.

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