History 371 Hon
Devine
Fall 2010
Michael
Patrick MacDonald, All Souls: A Family
Story from Southie
We will discuss All Souls: A Family Story
From Southie on December 1st.
As usual, you will take a twenty-question quiz on the reading at the
beginning of class.
The following study
questions will help you prepare for the quiz and, more importantly, think about
the issues that MacDonald brings up in his family’s story.
The
quiz questions will be drawn directly from these study questions.
Study Questions
- Why were most
kids in the Columbia Point projects born at home?
- What kinds of
adjectives best describe Helen? How
did she exhibit her pride in herself, her family, and her people? What were her performing talents?
- Who always had a
“shitbox” and what does the term refer to?
- What is the only
thing Helen kept from her relationship with Bob King?
- What is the
problem the family faces whenever the social worker comes around?
- What is Mass
Mental? Who ended up there and
why?
- In the fears of
the residents of Southie, where will bad news
eventually end up?
- How were the MacDonalds welcomed into the neighborhood of Old
Colony? How do they earn everyone’s
respect?
- How did Southies distinguish themselves physically from other
people?
- What did
pre-teens do for fun in Southie?
- What was the
worst thing you could be in Southie?
- What did Michael
do to get rid of cockroaches?
- What did people
boycott during National Boycott Day?
- What was ironic
about the adoption of “Fight the Power” as the song of protest for Southie?
- How did forced
busing affect many of Southie’s white teenagers?
- How did Helen
settle scores with Coley in the hospital and Chickie
on the stoop?
- How did life
change for the MacDonalds after Seamus was
born?
- Who was Whitey Bulger? What
did he supposedly do for Southie?
- Why were
strangers poking their heads into Kevin’s window?
- How does Michael get involved in the drug
trade?
- How did Helen
react to being shot? How did she
deal with the shooter?
- What tragic event did Davey and Kathy
have in common?
- What happened to all of Kathy’s friends
who came to see her in the hospital?
- How did Frankie get mixed up in the armed
car robbery?
- How did Kevin
end up at Bridgewater
State Hospital?
- How was Whitey
able to elude the police? How did
he stay on good terms with people in Southie?
- What effect did the Community Disorders
Unit have on race relations in Southie? Why?
- Why was Michael so angry that Whitey had
snitched? Who else was to blame for
all the problems in Southie?
- How would you
describe the case against Stevie?
Why was it so hard to get justice?
- Why was Michael
so happy at Grandpa’s funeral?
Broader
Issues
- What role does
silence play in the book? Is
silence good or bad in the context of life in Southie?
- The ancient Greeks defined
“tragedy” as a good man brought to a bad end by the very qualities that
allowed him to achieve greatness in the first place. How might one argue that this definition
of “tragedy” fits the lives of several of Michael MacDonald’s siblings and
the story of Southie itself?
- Think about
motherhood as it is portrayed in the book.
What distinguishes “Ma” (Helen) in the story? Is she a good mother to her children?
What role does she play in the Southie
community?
- Often our
society conflates the issues of race and poverty: “Black and Latino people
are poor; white people are middle class or wealthy.” How does All Souls complicate the issue of poverty?
After reading this book, why do you think some people born into poverty
remain poor while others escape poverty?
- What were the myths the
residents of Southie told themselves about their
neighborhood? What were the myths
that outsiders (white liberals, the media, social activists) told about
the neighborhood?
- How did Whitey Bulger exploit the residents of Southie
by appealing to the very values that many residents believed made their
neighborhood special?
- MacDonald remarks that if
you stand your ground, you end up going nowhere. Why is this observation
especially relevant when examining the teen culture of Southie?
- Why did the white residents
of Southie hate the white liberals? Why did the liberals’ dismissal of Southie residents as “racists” (particularly during
the busing crisis) tell only part of the truth?
- How did the absence of
fathers in Southie shape the culture of the
neighborhood?
- Why, after all of his harrowing
experiences growing up in Old Colony, does Michael still believe Southie is “the best place in the world”?