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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.
Use these essay questions as writing and critical thinking exercises for all levels of writers, and to build their literary analysis skills by requiring textual references throughout the essay.
Differentiation Suggestion: For English learners or struggling writers, strategies that work well include graphic organizers, sentence frames or starters, group work, or oral responses.
Scaffolded Essay Questions
Student Prompt: Write a short (1-3 paragraph) response using one of the bulleted outlines below. Cite details from the text over the course of your response that serve as examples and support.
1. Twelve Years a Slave opens with an excerpt from William Cowper’s 1785 blank verse “The Task.”
2. Throughout Twelve Years a Slave, Northup challenges a common myth among anti-abolitionists in the 1850s that enslaved people were passive and content in their roles, and that life was actually harder for free Black citizens in the North.
3. Twelve Years a Slave includes several intricate descriptions of day-to-day life and systems of production on different plantations.
Full Essay Assignments
Student Prompt: Write a structured and well-developed essay. Include a thesis statement, at least three main points supported by text details, and a conclusion.
1. Examine two to three rhetorical strategies Northup uses throughout Twelve Years a Slave to prove—and illustrate—that his narrative is truthful. How is a Black man’s sense of truth complicated in a world governed and controlled by Systems of Power, Control, and Punishment that revolve around white laws?
2. Why is Northup so attentive to the hardships of enslaved women? How did he use the examples of Eliza and Patsey and examples of the Subjugation of Women and Families to further advance the abolitionist cause?
3. Summarize the different roles, perspectives, and experiences of Ford, Tibeats, Tanner, Epps, Armsby, and Bass. Why does Northup devote such careful attention to social and class dynamics among white people? How do these individuals help uphold the Systems of Power, Control, and Punishment in antebellum America?
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