Preview

Summary Of Ernest Gaines 'The Sky Is Gray'

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
378 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary Of Ernest Gaines 'The Sky Is Gray'
In Ernest Gaines, “The Sky is Gray,” readers are introduced to James, a young boy growing up in Louisiana during a time when Jim Crowe laws still played a significant role in the daily life of African Americans. Under the guidance of his mother, Octavia, James learns survival skills based on rationale, accept generosity without showing weakness and with the help of a preacher and student, he learns to exercise stoicism in order to thrive and survive in a segregated world which is not an easy task to accomplish during this time period. Since James’s father had been drafted into war, at the same time, Octavia must fill in the fatherly love James is deprived of. This plays an important role in how she raises James to become a man because there

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In Ruta Sepety’s Between Shades of Gray, Lina Vilkas a fifteen-year-old Lithuanian perseveres through Stalin’s cruel reign. Initially, Lina’s family is broken up and forced out of their home under the biased rule of Joseph Stalin. While at a labor camp, Lina finds out her father has died and she also falls in love with a boy named Andrius. Later Lina and her family move to a camp in Tromimousk, North Pole, there her mother dies. A doctor helps Lina. The year is now 1995 and a man finds letters of Lina’s survival and her marriage to Andrius. In the long run Lina shares her survival with the world.…

    • 109 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    When dogs cry

    • 744 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The relationships in this novel are very different from each other. Although these are Boy meets girl relationships Cameron’s and Octavia’s is unique They use each other to help them through their own lives and to overcome their past and present. Octavia is Camerons first girlfriend he finds her when his brother Rube just broke up with her, Cameron keeps there relationship quiet for a while, he didn’t know how his brother would react. Cameron and Octavia grow close while they are together, Octavia tells Cameron some of her secrets and how her mum told her she could never bring a boy into the house unless she…

    • 744 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Diary of Miss Jane Pitman

    • 1862 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Ernest James Gaines was born in Oscar, Louisiana on a plantation in 1933. Of African American heritage, he was a good sport with his family and understood that hard work was a necessity in life. At the young age of only nine he aided his parents in the field working for fifty cents a day. He looked up to his handicap aunt, Augustine Jefferson, as she was his role model in his early youth. She inspired him and opened his eyes to setting a strong path for the generations to come. His mother and step father uprooted and moved to California when Gaines was fifteen. This was a great opportunity for his passion to read and write since the public library was for all races. The lack of African American study or authors pushed him even more to fill the shelves with the history of his race. At seventeen he sent his first novel to a publisher, but this was soon rejected and sent back. Later in his life he rewrote this and sent it again. While attending San Francisco State College he wrote a short story that was published in 1956. Two years later after graduating he studied creative writing at Stanford University until 1959. Gaines has written many short stories, novels, and has won many of awards as well, including the National Books Critic Circle Award. He was given most of his attention from the public after he published Of Love and Dust in 1967. Four years later The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman declared him as a literary icon for American fiction.…

    • 1862 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” is an eye opening experience into the life struggles of an African American family living in the ghettos of Southside Chicago. New dreams come and go like the wind for the desperation of a better life. Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” has more topics going on in it than just a story about an insurance check worth $10,000 for the death of the father, Big Walter. Topics such as African American oppression, racial stereotypes, and segregation. An introduction of the characters consist of Walter, Ruth, Mama, Travis, Beneatha, and Mr. Lindner. The setting is in a small two bedroom upstairs apartment with barely enough space for a kitchen.…

    • 808 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Sky is Gray by Ernest J. Gaines is a short story set during World War 11 and is focused on a poor African American Family’s struggles. The narrator, James, has developed a toothache resulting in him needing to go to the dentist. Due to the several barriers James and his mother, Octavia, encounter trying to get to the dentist, the theme of transition develops. James, being only a young innocent boy, is forced to grow up because his father is no longer with the family, and his family needs a strong man. Strength and pride is a continuous theme throughout the story because of Octavia. Gaines uses several literary devices to make his audience aware of the social injustices African Americans face in The Sky is Gray.…

    • 515 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It is the tale of a young black man on death row who gains dignity and self-awareness from a rural teacher who visits him daily in prison. This book exemplifies education and learning in different ways. In one way, the prisoner learns how to express his feelings and write them down while in prison. Another way the theme of education is shown is that the prisoner also learns how to compose himself with courage and dignity. The most important way that this book shares the theme of education is how Ernest Gaines educates all of the readers that all humans ( no matter their race) are equal and should be treated that way. Being able to exemplify the many different ways there are to introduce the theme of knowledge into his novels was one of Gaines’s strengths. However, he was also known to have included some sub themes that would compliment his main theme of…

    • 915 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    To Kill A Mockingbird is a novel that is artistically written. Through the situations the “mockingbirds” go through living in Maycomb County, many important life lessons are taught not only to the characters but also to the reader. The dilemmas at hand are creative ways of teaching these lessons. Scout’s growth throughout the novel is symbolic of the growth of the town in many issues surrounding racial prejudice, sexism, and the usage of pigeon…

    • 75 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    As a native of Eatonville, Florida; and an anthropologist-folklorist, Zora Neale Hurston had an intimate, profound understanding of the South Florida locale of Their Eyes Were Watching God. Using her vast knowledge of the cultural expectations, practices and customs of the black community of the region, Hurston was able to create a vividly lifelike atmosphere in this novel- a rich environment steeped in folk traditions and superstitions; known as the local color of the area. This background was crucial to the development of both plot and cast, namely the protagonist, Janie.…

    • 822 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line” – DuBios. People of color have had the worst of sufferings around the globe, from slavery to racism and hate; DuBios addresses the problem that despite that people of color are free, they suffer the early hate of the post civil war era, and are always known as the “problem” of the white dominated society. For many decades the people of color lived in a state of double consciousness, stuck on the invisible side of a veil that cloaks their voice into silence. In Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, the author confronts the same problem through the life of the female heroine Janie and her quest of identity. On her way Janie is met with many challenges that raise eyebrows and gossiping that quickly plagues the people around her like an epidemic, with quick judgment ensuing.…

    • 428 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Warriors Dont Cry

    • 411 Words
    • 2 Pages

    This memoir deals with civic participation, civil rights, justice and racism in a time in American society when segregation was in full force. The story makes the historical events realistic and relatable. The idea of segregation, the feelings of injustice and racism were all aspects of society that I will never get to experience. This book really brought me into the world of a young black teen in a segregated world. I felt…

    • 411 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The purpose of Alice Walker’s novel The Color Purple and Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is to demonstrate the hardships that are met when ignorance and tradition bring about the influence of sexism, racism and genuine prejudice to the general public. Ignorance is the root cause of prejudice as it prevents one to see beauty, so when it comes to dealing with the discriminating behavior held in this social order, the vast majority of people are judged by the label and stereotype society has given them, not by the kind of person they are inside. Nevertheless, through these corrupt societies, the protagonists are able to experience incredible journeys of courage, growth and love. Bravery and love is crucial in both novels in order for the protagonists to break through their limiting boundaries and stand up for what they believe. Bravery in both is also essential for fighting against discrimination and when both protagonists transcend from innocence to experience, they becomes more aware of the harsh realities of prejudice and ignorance projected in the world. Through proper guidance, they come to understand what genuine evil is and what is simply given the label of being evil. Love is demonstrated to be capable of conquering the ignorance and courage opposes the notion of being disregarded. For instance, Scout comes to love Boo, conquering the ignorance that Maycomb has projected into her mind and Celie comes to fall in love as well as idolize Shug for her dominant ways, freeing herself from becoming indulged furthermore with the ignorance her surrounding present to her. The characters in both novels begin to use their certain dominance and authority in order to take matters under their own wings; in means of attempting to speak up for what their moral claims to be right. By elaborating on the epic journeys that the characters from both novels venture on, I intend to prove how the two corrupt societies are fueled by ignorance and…

    • 3826 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The book is set during the ‘Great Depression’ in Southern Alabama, in a county explained to be very slow, wet and hot. The novel is narrated in a first person perspective through adult recounting her past as a 6 year old, who didn’t understand much of the things she observed around the adults. Her innocence as a child allowed her to ask any question and as an observer, she is able to describe the context enough for the readers to understand, even if the child Scout doesn’t. The theme ‘coexistence of good and evil’ is one of the major messages in the book and is shown in every corner of the county. Where Bob Ewell has accused an innocent man, Tom, to a false rape case, Atticus comes to assist the coloured man by his own choice, for no reason other than to fight for justice. Where there is evil in the place, the good will be present to maintain the…

    • 881 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    From the beginning when the African slaves first set foot on American soil, the Negro has been perceived as an inferior race. Unfortunately, the effects from slavery still take a hold of the Negro race even today. In this novel, Carter G. Woodson attempts to thoroughly explain why exactly this has come to exist. Although written years ago, the ideals in his book are still seen to be true. Woodson's theory is that because of the way the Negro is treated by the oppressor, he has been brainwashed to believe his inferiority to other races to be the truth. This in turn keeps him from trying to advance in any shape or form because he thinks that he will step out of his place. "When you control a man's thinking you don't have to worry about his actions. He will find his "proper place" and stay in it." (Woodson, xix)…

    • 2147 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Henry Louis Gates Jr. general editor, Nellis Y. McKay general editor 2nd edition The Norton AnthologyAfrican American Literature noron2004 new york…

    • 1720 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the story “The Kind of Light that Shines on Texas” by Reginald McKnight we encounter several conflicts that our main character, Clint, an African American child who attends a public school back in 1960, Waco, Texas. He faces through out the story several conflicts with society and also the conflicts he faces personally like living in prejudice. He also has problems with his mother due to his inner problems and lack of communication in the house. The point of view of this story is what really makes it so engaging and easy to read.…

    • 1152 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays