TOPIC: UNDERSTANDING LYNCHING (Language Arts, History)



TOPIC: UNDERSTANDING LYNCHING

Discipline

Language Arts, History

Grade Level

9 – 12

Context

• 1910

• 1920

Type of Activity

Individual, Small Group, Writing

Objectives:

• Students will understand the broader historical and social messages behind the visit to Crooks’ quarters

• Students will gain a broader understanding of race relations in America during the early 1900s

Overview

Lynchings were illegal acts of vigilante “justice” that have been a part of United States history since the Colonial Period. The theme of lynching appears several times during Of Mice and Men, and is integral to understanding the conclusion of the novel.

“She turned on him in scorn. ‘Listen nigger,’ she said. ‘You know what I can do to you if you open your trap?’” (80).

Materials Needed/Preparation

• Prior discussions of lynching (see “Controversial Issues, Jim Crow and Lynch Law)

• Prior experience with the Jigsaw activity (recommended)

o It may take more time to complete this activity if students are not familiar with the Jigsaw activity.

• Copies of “The Lynching of Emmett Till” ( )

• Copies of “Reactions in Writing” to the lynching of Emmett Till and the trial of Bryant and Milan ( )

• Students have read at least through the end of page 83

• Copies of journal topics and/or conversation map (optional).

Estimated Time:

2 class periods

Procedure:

• Journal topic:

o Consider providing the below journal topics as an advance organizer. You may also wish to provide a conversation map. See materials needed/preparation, above.

o Recall the scene in Crooks’ quarters once Curley’s wife arrives (pages 76-83), focusing on what happens after the passage quoted above. What is Curley’s wife threatening to do to Crooks? How did Crooks react? Why did he react this way? What do you think about his reaction? Should he have reacted differently?

o How did Candy react? What do you think about his reaction? Should he have reacted differently?

o How would you have reacted if you were Crooks? If you were Candy?

o Share out/discuss student responses. Make sure students are being specific, particularly when they are critiquing the reactions of the characters and explaining their own, hypothetical, reactions.

• Journal topic:

o What is a victim? What is a bystander? What is an upstander? Which characters in the above scene match which description? Explain.

o Share out/discuss student responses.

• Jigsaw activity with “The Lynching of Emmett Till” (see “Jigsaw Activity”)

o Different classes will require a different amount of time for this activity. Be certain to save enough time at the end of the class session for groups to present their findings.

• In their same Jigsaw groups, have students read “Reactions in Writing” ().

• Have students look again at their journal responses.

o Discussion prompt: after reading “The Lynching of Emmett Till” and “Reactions in Writing,” would anyone respond differently? Explain/discuss.

• This step also works well as a written assignment.

• Journal/discussion topic: Why did John Steinbeck include this scene in the novel?

o Students should consider literary reasons – how does this scene further the story; how does it function in the novel?

o Students should consider what kind of social/historical message Steinbeck is conveying.

o This step can be returned to after completing the novel.

Standards Met

• History and Social Science Content Standards 8

o Students analyze the character and lasting consequences of Reconstruction: 1, 4

• History and Social Science Content Standards 10

o Students analyze the development of federal civil rights and voting rights: 2, 4

• History and Social Science Content Standards 11

• Students analyze the major political, social, economic, technological, and cultural developments of the 1920s: 2

• Reading Standards for Literature 6-12

o Key Ideas and Details: 1, 2, 3

• Reading Standards for Informational Text 6-12

o Key Ideas and Details: 1, 2, 3

o Craft and Structure: 5

• Writing Standards 6-12

o Text Types and Purposes: 1, 3

• Reading Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies 6-12

o Craft and Structure: 6

• Speaking and Listening Standards 6-12

o Comprehension and Collaboration: 1, 2, 3

o Presentation of Knowledge and Ideas: 4

• Reading Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies 6-12

o Key Ideas and Details: 1, 2, 3

• Writing Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects 6-12

o Text Types and Purposes: 1, 2

Post Activity/Takeaways/Follow-up

• Post Activities

o View “The Murder of Emmett Till” (PBS American Experience).

o Read and discuss selections from the Ida B. Wells pamphlet “Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in all its Phases” ().

o Discuss lynching statistics ().

o View the brief video on lynching at the site “Without Sanctuary” ().

o Have students write an internal monologue from Crooks’ point of view.

• What is Crooks thinking during this scene?

• How does he want to react even though he knows he cannot?

• Takeaways

o Students should come away with a sobering understanding of the brutal state of race relations in the early twentieth century.

o Students should come away with an understanding of the challenges and importance of being an upstander.

Assessment

• How thorough were students in their Jigsaw work? Were the main points/takeaways addressed?

• How well did students support their responses to the prompts?

Understanding Lynching

On pages 80 and 81, Curley’s wife said to Crooks, “You know what I can do to you if you open your trap?... I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it aint’ even funny.”

1. What is Curley’s wife threatening to do to Crooks?

2. How did Crooks react? Why did he react this way?

3. What do you think about his reaction? Should he have reacted differently?

4. How did Candy react? What do you think about his reaction? Should he have reacted differently?

5. How would you have reacted if you were Crooks? If you were Candy?

Understanding Lynching

On pages 80 and 81, Curley’s wife said to Crooks, “You know what I can do to you if you open your trap?... I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it aint’ even funny.”

1. When she said this, Curley’s wife was threatening to __________ Crooks.

2. When Curley’s wife threatened him, Crooks acted differently. He became __________. He acted this way because __________.

3. I feel that the way Crooks reacted was __________. Another way he could have reacted was to__________.

4. After Curley’s wife threatened Crooks, Candy spoke up. At first he __________, but then he __________.

5. I feel that what Candy did was __________. Another way he could have reacted was to __________.

6. If I were Crooks, I would have __________.

7. If I were Candy, I would have __________.

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