Pages

Saturday, January 28, 2012

The Other Side: Shorter Poems

Bibliography
Johnson, Angela. 1998. The Other Side: Shorter Poems. New York: Orchard Books. ISBN 978-0531301142.
Review
In this book of free verse poetry, Johnson writes about her memories of growing up in the African-American community of Shorter, AL before it was bulldozed away. Some of the poems are those of an ordinary childhood describing the red dirt, hiding places, and piano lessons ending in tears. However, Johnson also touches on more serious subjects such as her father’s nightmares after returning from Vietnam and the slash across her uncle’s forehead that was inflicted by a “redneck” when he tried to order lemonade at a lunch counter. Johnson eloquently describes the significance of the slash in the poem “Counters”:
All I can think is
how terrible it was
 and how beautiful
it made him.
The book was a 1999 winner of the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award as well as a Coretta Scott King Award Honor. The free verse format will be appealing to young adults as the poems read like short stories packed with conflicting emotions about a town that once was Shorter, AL.  The black and white photos put faces to the folks of Shorter and create an authenticity that will further draw reader’s to this collection of poetic memories.
Classroom/Library Connection
Recommended audience: middle school and high school students
This historical poetry book highlights events from the 1960s and 1970s. It would be good to pair with a unit on civil rights or with To Kill A Mockingbird. In the poem “Nineties”, Johnson describes her reaction to a racial slur shouted to her when she moved to Cleveland Ohio. She ends the poem by saying,
Had to make Mama stop
so I could look at the
face of somebody who
dressed like me
and probably
wanted what I did
from the world,
but would never live in
mine.
Have the students read the poem with a partner.
After Reading: As a whole group discuss the misconception that racism was/is confined to the south. Then allow students to respond to the final lines by doing a think-pair-share. Have students discuss with a partner why they think it was important to the poet to look at the person shouting the degrading word at her. Have them try to consolidate their answer into 1-5 words and text it to a text wall by using polleverywhere.com.

No comments:

Post a Comment