A Lesson Before Dying Theme of Race

At the center of almost every social interaction, conversation, and even inner thought of the characters in A Lesson Before Dying lies the question of race. In pre-Civil Rights Louisiana, skin color affects the way you treat each other and the way you are treated. The history of slavery still haunts everything, and not in a friendly Casper-like way. It also influences the bonds people form and who they feel like they can trust.

This is the #1, Big Deal, Most Important theme of this novel, by a long shot.

Questions About Race

  1. How does race figure into Jefferson's fate? If he were white, would things be different? How?
  2. Does the novel offer any hope for improvement of race relations in Louisiana? Why or why not?
  3. How does history show up in the way the characters experience race?

Chew on This

Try on an opinion or two, start a debate, or play the devil’s advocate.

The characters in A Lesson Before Dying are absolutely limited in their life possibilities by their race.

A Lesson Before Dying shows how race is an important factor in life, but also shows how characters should aspire to not think of race as important.