Abstract
In A Lesson Before Dying (1993/1994), Ernest J. Gaines situates the courthouse, the jail, the home, and the church as central to the gendered racial consciousness of African American men and boys. With their distinctive American and keenly southern histories, each site holds particular significance to the lives of African American males. For the Black men and boys in Gaines's novel, especially the protagonists Grant Wiggins and Jefferson, each location functions as a poignant place of memory, instruction, and transformation. Ultimately, Gaines's fictive representation of the role of physical sites (and experiences occurring therein) in the development of Black male consciousness is linked to broader discussions on how African American men understand the U.S. South.
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