History 476
Devine
Spring 2007
Study Questions
for Anne Moody, Coming of Age in Mississippi
- What
were Anne Moody’s most important early childhood experiences? What was her
family’s life like? What hardships
did she have to endure?
- Describe
Anne’s (Essie Mae’s) early contacts with whites. How does she learn that whites and
African Americans are different?
- How
does Anne learn that “race” is a social construct – that society dictates
who is “white” and who is “black?”
- How
would you describe relations between blacks and whites in Mississippi when
Anne was a young girl? How did
whites in rural Mississippi
exercise power over blacks?
- Who
was Emmett Till and why was he murdered?
What effect does his death have on Anne? How does she react to it?
- What
are the differences between Anne and her mother? Why does one gravitate toward the
Movement while the other fears it?
- Does
Anne hate white people? Does she act differently toward whites than did
most blacks in rural Mississippi? Does her attitude toward whites change
throughout the book?
- Does she hate black people? Is she justified in her hostility or is
it misplaced?
- Did
Anne’s activities in the NAACP and SNCC provide fulfillment, frustration,
a sense of accomplishment? Why did she
join these organizations?
- Why
did the Movement put such emphasis on the voter registration campaign? By
securing blacks the vote, what were activists hoping to achieve? Why was it so hard for them to achieve
their goals?
- What
was the atmosphere of Mississippi
like for a civil rights worker? In
what kind of an environment did they work? How did this atmosphere take an
emotional toll on Anne?
- In
Anne’s view, what factors – economic, political, social
– have caused the terrible conditions for blacks in rural Mississippi?
- What
is Anne's attitude toward organized religion? Does it change as her life
progresses? How does she feel about the black ministers? Do you agree with
her views?
- Why is
Anne critical of Martin Luther King, Jr.?
- Why is
Anne skeptical of MLK's commitment to
non-violent resistance? Does she
offer a viable alternative to King's strategy?
- How
does Anne’s gender – the fact that she is a woman – affect how she relates
to other people and how other people relate to her? To what extent does her being a woman
shape her experiences in the Movement?
- Do
Anne's efforts in the Movement really accomplish anything? Why does she
often fear that all her work is in vain?
- Why
does Anne leave the Movement? How
did her brief stays in Baton Rouge and New Orleans affect
her? Why does she return to Mississippi?
- Why
are young people a key component of the Movement?
- One
commentator has remarked about Coming of Age in Mississippi, “The
relationship between fear and power is at the center of this book. Only by overcoming the former does one
achieve the latter.” What does he
mean by this?
- Would
you say this book ends on a note of hope or despair?