Discussion Questions
Discussion Questions
Discussion Questions
A Christmas Carol 1. What makes Christmas such an effective setting for the humanitarian issues (i.e. sympathy for the poor, needy children) Dickens was trying to address? 2. In what literal and figurative ways does Dickens portray Scrooge as isolatedfrom his family, coworkers, from the rest of humanity, even from himself? In what ways does Scrooge fit the "alazon" character type? 3. What important issues does Dickens use children and childhood to symbolize? 4. In what ways does Tiny Tim serve as the thematic center of A Christmas Carol? (How does he connect all the major characters/symbols/themes in this novella?) 5. What specific events lead to Scrooge's reformation? In particular, at what point in the story do we first begin to see him change (that is, when does he first begin to show emotions other than anger)? 6. In Stave Three, why is Scrooge so moved byand terrified ofthe children, "Ignorance and Want"? Why does the spirit tell him to "most of all beware [Ignorance]" (Dickens 49)? 7. What aspects of humor and parody do we see at work in A Christmas Carol? What kinds of social attitudes and/or institutions does Dickens satirize in this work?
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer 1. How does Tom Sawyer change over the course of the story? 2. Analyze the character of Aunt Polly and her relationship to Tom. 3. What role does alcohol and images of drunkenness play in the novel? Dracula 1. Discuss the roles of Lucy Westerna and Mina Harker in the novel. How are the two women similar? Different? What accounts for their differences? To what extent does the novel depend on both of these women to propel the narrative forward? 2. What are the elements of vampire folklore? For example, what, according to the novel, attracts or repels a vampire? How do you kill a vampire for good? Although Stoker did not invent the mythology of the vampire, his novel firmly established the conventions of vampire fiction. Choose another novel that deals with vampires and compare it with Dracula. (Consider, for example, one of Anne Rice's vampire books or Stephanie Meyer's Twilight series.) In what ways are the novels similar? Different? 3. Do you consider this novel a work of horror? Explain. 4. How does Stoker describe the Count? What are the effects of this description?
Gullivers Travels 1. Why did Swift choose horses to represent good people and Yahoos (monkey men) to represent bad people? 2. Does Gulliver eventually find peace? What can Gulliver still not tolerate by the end of the story? 3. What comments does Swift (not Gulliver) make about religion in Gulliver's Travels? Use specific examples from the text to support your answers. 4. What effect did each of Gulliver's adventures have upon him? 5. What is irony? Give specific examples of Swift's use of irony in Gulliver's Travels and explain the effect of the use of irony on us, the readers. 6. Considering all of Gulliver's travels, explain what Swift would consider an ideal race of beings, and explain why or why not man is or could become that race. Hamlet 1. What is "rotten in the state of Denmark," as Marcellus tells us? What do we learn about the situation in Scene I? In Scene II? 2. How does the interaction between Hamlet and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern help to explain what's wrong with Hamlet? Why are Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in Denmark? 3. What happens in the "play-within-a-play"? How do the speeches and actions reflect on events in the kingdom of Denmark? How does the king respond? 4. Is Hamlet really mad in this play, or is merely pretending to be mad? (Find events that support your answer.) 5. Who is Osric, and why is he included in the play? 6. What is the outcome of the fight scene at the end?
The Hound of the Baskervilles 1. Holmes and Watson can be seen as the epitome of the crime-fighting duo. Discuss the way in which their personalities and skills complement each other. 2. What does a close reading of Chapter 1, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, reveal to readers about the character? 3. From what object did Watson and Holmes learn about James Mortimer? What clues did it provide? 4. Give at least three clues that were obvious to the solution of the mystery that Dr. Watson did not interpret correctly but Sherlock Holmes saw early on and used to solve the case.
Moby Dick 1. Why does the novel's narrator begin his story with "Call me Ishmael"? (p. 3) 2. How does Ishmael's relationship to Queequeg change from the time they meet to the sailing of the Pequod? 3. Why does Ahab pursue Moby Dick so single-mindedly? 4. Why does Starbuck decide against killing Ahab, despite believing that it is the only way to "survive to hug his wife and child again?" (p. 559) Why does Starbuck fail to convince Ahab to give up his pursuit of Moby Dick ("The Symphony")? 5. Why does the coffin prepared for Queequeg become Ishmael's life buoy once the Pequod sinks? 6. Who or what is primarily responsible for the destruction of the Pequod and, except for Ishmael, her crew? 7. How has his experience aboard the Pequod affected Ishmael?
Oliver Twist 1. Victorian attitudes suggested that poverty and vice were connected, and those born poor were bad from birth. In what ways did Dickens respond to these prevailing attitudes?
examples from the book. 3. What is the major conflict in the book? What type of conflict is it? 4. How does Cardinal Richelieu affect d'Artagnan's rise to fame more than do d'Artagnan's friends? 5. Is Cardinal Richelieu, ultimately, a sympathetic or unsympathetic character?
White Fang 4. Talk about the relationship between wolves and human beings. Why do you think the Indians take White Fang to their camp? 5. How was one wall of his world different? How did he feel about it? Why is the gray pup confused about this wall? 6. What does the incident of the hawk teach the gray pup? As the cub wanders farther from the cave, how does his selfknowledge improve? 7. What important lesson of bondage did White Fang learn from Grey Beavers beating?