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Analysis Of The Lesson By Toni Cade Bambara

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“The Lesson” by Toni Cade Bambara is a story about a group of seven kids and is told in the point of view of Sylvia, one of the children that seems to be a leader of the group. The other children of the group were Sugar, Flyboy, Fat Butt, Junebug, Q.T., Rosie Giraffe, and Mercedes. They are taken to an upscale toy store by an elderly lady, named Miss Moore, who lives in their neighborhood and takes the responsibility of educating the children when they are not in school. Miss Moore takes the children to a high end toy store in the city to teach them about the value of money, and to show them how the wealth in America is not equally distributed. “The Lesson” by Toni Cade Bambara should be included in the ENC 1102 curriculum because of the theme …show more content…

There are total of nine characters that play a role throughout the story, and each of them leave their own mark on the story. For the most part all of the children have a shocked reaction when learning the price of the toys they see at the toy store, but they do vary in the manner with which the react. In Rena Korb’s critical essay on “The Lesson” she explains this at a deeper level, “Big Butt reacts on a visceral level. He sees the microscope and declares ‘I’m going to buy that there,’ when he is not even sure what a person uses a microscope to look at.” (Korb). Junebug on the other hand reacts in a different way when being told what a paperweight was, and how much this particular one cost “he figures she ‘crazy or lyin’ because ‘we don’t keep paper on top of the desk in my class.’” (Korb). There is also one of the children who seems to be a little different from the rest, Mercedes. When Miss Moore explains what a paperweight is and how it is used to keep paper on top of a desk, she is the only one who says she has a desk at home. Another instance where we see Mercedes react differently than the other children is when everyone is shocked by the price of the sailboat being over one thousand dollars; commenting how they would buy parts from a store to build their own for less than a dollar, she says “My father’d but it for me if I wanted it.” (Bambara, p. 149). These are only a few examples of how the characters differ from each other, but all of them together make the story great; the way Bambara was able to tie everything in and make the characters relate to one another despite their differences is why this story should be read in this

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