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A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Reading Check and Short Answer Questions on key points are designed for guided reading assignments, in-class review, formative assessment, quizzes, and more.
“THE TRADITION” BY JERICHO BROWN
Reading Check
1. What type of plant does Brown reference in his poem?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What does Brown list in the last line of the poem, and how does the use of italics connect this line to other parts of the poem?
Paired Resource
INTRODUCTION BY JESMYN WARD
Reading Check
1. What Baldwin essay did Ward read when she was in her twenties?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How many essays did Ward receive that concerned themselves with the future, and what message did they convey to Ward?
“HOMEGOING, AD” BY KIMA JONES
Reading Check
1. In “Homegoing, AD,” for which family member’s funeral is the narrator traveling home?
“THE WEIGHT” BY RACHEL KAADZI GHANSAH
Reading Check
1. To which of her relatives does Ghansah compare James Baldwin in “The Weight”?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. Where does the narrator travel in “The Weight,” why does she make this trip, and how does she feel about it?
“LONELY IN AMERICA” BY WENDY S. WALTERS
Reading Check
1. What is significant about the city of Portsmouth, NH in “Lonely in America”?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How does Walters describe her “cultural memory” of slavery, and why does she dislike thinking about it?
Paired Resource
“WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE” BY ISABEL WILKERSON
Reading Check
1. What period of time do historians refer to as the Nadir, according to Wilkerson’s essay?
“‘THE DEAR PLEDGES OF OUR LOVE’: A DEFENSE OF PHILLIS WHEATLEY’S HUSBAND” BY HONORÉE FANONNE JEFFERS
Reading Check
1. How old was Phillis Wheatley said to be when she arrived in America as an enslaved child?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. Who was Margaretta Matilda Odell, and what is her significance in present-day understanding of Phillis Wheatley?
“WHITE RAGE” BY CAROL ANDERSON
Reading Check
1. Who was belatedly credited with the 1981 interview describing the evolution concerning racist politics?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. According to Anderson, how does white rage differ from Black rage, and what does this distinction show about racism in America?
“CRACKING THE CODE” BY JESMYN WARD
Reading Check
1. Who does Ward mistake as a white woman in her essay “Cracking the Code”?
“QUERIES OF UNREST” BY CLINT SMITH
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What does a white boy call the speaker of “Queries of Unrest,” and what does that make the speaker think of?
“BLACKER THAN THOU” BY KEVIN YOUNG
Reading Check
1. What song did President Obama sing at the funeral for those killed at the Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, SC?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What is the white woman’s name who is at the center of Young’s essay “Blacker Than Thou,” and what is her connection to race and racism?
Paired Resource
“Why Rachel Dolezal Can Never Be Black”
“DA ART OF STORYTELLIN’ (A PREQUEL)” BY KIESE LAYMON
Reading Check
1. What band, discovered by Laymon as a young adult, helps him understand his grandmother better?
“BLACK AND BLUE” BY GARNETTE CADOGAN
Reading Check
1. What three cities are at the center of Cadogan’s essay “Black and Blue”?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What prevents Cadogan from returning to New Orleans after traveling back to Kingston for his grandmother’s funeral, and where does he relocate instead?
“THE CONDITION OF BLACK LIFE IS ONE OF MOURNING” BY CLAUDIA RANKINE
Reading Check
1. What significant tragedy that further propelled the Civil Rights Movement occurred just days after Rankine’s birth?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What decision did Mamie Till Mobley make about her son Emmett Till’s body after his murder, and what symbolism did this choice hold?
“KNOW YOUR RIGHTS!” BY EMILY RABOTEAU
Reading Check
1. What poet defined hope as “the thing with feathers”?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. In “Know Your Rights!,” how does Raboteau’s four-year-old son respond to nearing the stairs to the bridge, and what worries Raboteau about his reaction?
“COMPOSITE POPS” BY MITCHELL S. JACKSON
Reading Check
1. What does the term “pops” signify to Jackson?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. Where was Jackson when his first composite father Big Chris died, and what about Big Chris’s death confirmed the bond that Jackson had with this particular father figure?
Paired Resource
“THEORIES OF TIME AND SPACE” BY NATASHA TRETHEWEY
Reading Check
1. In “Theories of Time and Space,” what will be waiting for the subject of the poem upon return to Ship Island?
“THIS FAR: NOTES ON LOVE AND REVOLUTION” BY DANIEL JOSÉ OLDER
Reading Check
1. To whom is the epistolary essay “This Far: Notes on Love and Revolution” addressed?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What word does Older express mistrust for, and why does he feel this way?
“MESSAGE TO MY DAUGHTERS” BY EDWIDGE DANTICAT
Reading Check
1. Of what specific demographic group does attorney and professor Raja Jorjani argue that Black Americans could qualify as members?
Short Answer
Answer each question in at least 1 complete sentence. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What conversation does Danticat consider having with her daughters, and why hasn’t she started that conversation yet?
Recommended Next Reads
The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin
Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates
“THE TRADITION” BY JERICHO BROWN
Reading Check
1. Flowers
Short Answer
1. Brown lists the names of Black men who have been killed by police officers (John Crawford, Eric Garner, and Mike Brown), and the use of italics connects these men to the flowers he lists earlier in the poem.
INTRODUCTION BY JESMYN WARD
Reading Check
1. “Notes of a Native Son”
Short Answer
1. Ward received only three essays that were future-oriented; the rest were focused on the past or the present. This showed Ward how intertwined the past is with the present, and it also spoke to how difficult it is to consider the realities likely facing younger Black children in their own futures.
“HOMEGOING, AD” BY KIMA JONES
Reading Check
1. Their grandfather’s
“THE WEIGHT” BY RACHEL KAADZI GHANSAH
Reading Check
1. Her grandfather
Short Answer
1. She travels to the Cote d’Azur region of France to visit the home in which James Baldwin was living when he died. She feels uncertain about this trip because she has complicated feelings about Baldwin.
“LONELY IN AMERICA” BY WENDY S. WALTERS
Reading Check
1. It contains a recovered African American burial site.
Short Answer
1. Walters describes her “cultural memory” of slavery as being a mainly Southern phenomenon, and she doesn’t like thinking about it because she doesn’t want to consider how slavery was present in her own geographic community.
“WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE” BY ISABEL WILKERSON
Reading Check
1. The period of time that reversed Black advancement after Reconstruction
“‘THE DEAR PLEDGES OF OUR LOVE’: A DEFENSE OF PHILLIS WHEATLEY’S HUSBAND” BY HONORÉE FANONNE JEFFERS
Reading Check
1. She was thought to be about seven years old.
Short Answer
1. Odell was a self-described “collateral descendent” of the Wheatleys, and much of what has been used to piece together Phillis Wheatley’s life has been filtered through Odell’s own words.
“WHITE RAGE” BY CAROL ANDERSON
Reading Check
1. Lee Atwater, Reagan’s key political strategist
Short Answer
1. Unlike overt protest and looting, white rage is more unnoticed and insidious. It takes the shape of redlining or voter suppression, or the nuances of the criminal justice system. This distinction reinforces institutional racism and the power dynamic between white and Black Americans.
“CRACKING THE CODE” BY JESMYN WARD
Reading Check
1. Her great-aunt Eunice
“QUERIES OF UNREST” BY CLINT SMITH
Short Answer
1. The speaker is referred to as marginalized, and this makes him think of the edge of a sheet of paper and other things that exist on the margins.
“BLACKER THAN THOU” BY KEVIN YOUNG
Reading Check
1. “Amazing Grace”
Short Answer
1. The woman’s name is Rachel Dolezal, and she is a white woman who passed as Black for many years, which connects to complicated racial concepts like white privilege, passing, and “blackface.”
“DA ART OF STORYTELLIN’ (A PREQUEL)” BY KIESE LAYMON
Reading Check
1. OutKast
“BLACK AND BLUE” BY GARNETTE CADOGAN
Reading Check
1. Kingston, New Orleans, and New York City
Short Answer
1. Hurricane Katrina prevents Cadogan from returning to New Orleans, so he goes to stay with an aunt in New York City.
“THE CONDITION OF BLACK LIFE IS ONE OF MOURNING” BY CLAUDIA RANKINE
Reading Check
1. The 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama, that killed four young Black girls
Short Answer
1. Mamie Till Mobley chose to have an open-casket funeral, where the funeral goers and media would have to look upon her son’s mutilated body. In doing so, she remade his body as evidence of the crimes perpetrated against Black people, and her public grief used “the lynching tradition against itself.”
“KNOW YOUR RIGHTS!” BY EMILY RABOTEAU
Reading Check
1. Emily Dickinson
Short Answer
1. He refuses to walk down the stairs, instead laying on the pavement in defiance. While this behavior is frustrating in a child, it was particularly disturbing to Raboteau because “that defiance could get him killed” in a world where being a defiant Black man is dangerous.
“COMPOSITE POPS” BY MITCHELL S. JACKSON
Reading Check
1. The collection of father-like figures who have influenced him
Short Answer
1. Jackson was on a plane en route to say goodbye to Big Chris when he died. Big Chris’s last words, expressing his desire to hold on until Jackson arrived, confirmed the bond that the two had; Big Chris viewed Jackson as one of his own sons, despite biology.
“THEORIES OF TIME AND SPACE” BY NATASHA TRETHEWEY
Reading Check
1. A photograph of the subject
“THIS FAR: NOTES ON LOVE AND REVOLUTION” BY DANIEL JOSÉ OLDER
Reading Check
1. Natassian, the author’s wife
Short Answer
1. Older mistrusts the word revolution, because he has seen revolutions go wrong; he also feels that when words become overused, as revolution has, they lose meaning.
“MESSAGE TO MY DAUGHTERS” BY EDWIDGE DANTICAT
Reading Check
1. She says they could qualify as refugees.
Short Answer
1. Danticat wonders when she should tell her daughters about the abuse that their family friend Abner Louima faced at the hands of police. She hasn’t yet had the conversation because, not only is it a difficult one, but she also doesn’t want her daughters to grow up fearful of the world in which they live.
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By Jesmyn Ward