Title: Night Walker
1Night Walker
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4Pre-reading
- Do you agree that clothes make the man?
5Building vocabulary
- 1.
- A. threatingly
- B. not recognizableooze, pass through slowly
- C. eager, devoted
- D push ahead gradually but firmly
- E. susceptible to injury
- F. death causing
- G. false bravery
- H. suffocate
- I. Care, advance protection against danger
- J. cold and hard like steelthrusting forward
6Building vocabulary
- 2. Action victim, shoved, swung, cast back.
pick up her pace, running, disappeared. - Emotion mean, worried, menacingly, in earnest.
- It creates a suspenseful atmosphere suggests
impending or potential violence.
7Understand the writers ideas
- 1. He portrays himself as a menacing figurethe
way that white people often view him in such
situations.
8Understanding the writers ideas
- 2. In Hyde Park, Chicago late one evening
twenty-two (or youngish) taking a walk to
relieve insomnia because she though he might be
a mugger or rapist no, the term is applied
ironicallyhe was surprised, embarrassed, and
dismayed.
9Understand the writers ideas
- 3. Urban white peoples tendency to view him as a
threat on the streetthe ability to alter public
space in ugly ways. The implication is that in
some white peoples eyes his presence can
transform any locale into a dangerous place.
10Understand the writers ideas
- 4. Sensitive, intellectual, gentle. He shies away
from violencehe even dislikes cutting up
chicken. He describes this as an adaptation to a
violent childhood environment where those who
courted violence died or went to jail.
11Understand the writers ideas
- 5. People may react violently when the
feelrightly or wronglythat they are being
threatened with violence. - 6. Defensive reactions to fearlocking car doors,
crossing to the other side of the street.
12Understand the writers ideas
- 7. They thought he might break into their cars to
rob them. He became accustomed to, but never
comfortable with it.
13Understand the writers ideas
- 8. Chester, Pennsylvania, a small industrial
town-he did not stand out against the more
general level of violent crime there, and was
presumably not considered a threat. Manhattan has
so much side walk traffic that one-to-one
encounters are not likely women in Brooklyn are
highly sensitive to potentially dangerous
situations and often act as if bracing themselves
against a possible attack.
14Understand the writers ideas
- 9. Surprised (early on), understanding, but also
angry. He has had to suppress the anger for the
sake of his sanity. Keeping his distance from
people waiting before following people into
buildings so as not to seem to be tailing them
whistling classic music.
15Understand the writers ideas
- 10. Police mistook the reporter for the suspect
in the crime on which he was writing a background
story. Only his press credentials saved him from
being arrested.
16Understand the writers ideas
- 11. Not directly related in this essay, although
security guards at his office mistook him for a
burglar (par. 7), and he notes that tales of
mistreatment by police are commonplace among
black men.
17Understand the writers ideas
- 12. No. He acknowledges that young black men are
drastically overrepresented among violent
criminals. - 13. They might assume that an educated, cultured
individual (as someone who knows classical music
would presumably be) would not be likely to
attack them.
18Understanding the writers techniques
- 1. The fact that a black man walking in urban
America will, to the majority of his white
counterparts, be indistinguishable from predatory
criminals, and will often be regarded as if he
were one.
19Understanding the writers techniques
- 2. Night Walker could be the title of a
suspense or horror storyexcites reader interest,
as does the opening, My first victim. Both of
these seem to promise excitement, action.
20Understanding the writers techniques
- 3. Staples uses the staccato narrative style and
evocative diction of crime and spy stories to
establish a suspenseful tone. The tone shifts in
the second paragraph, where Staples dismantles
the illusion that the previous passage was about
an impending crime.
21Understanding the writers techniques
- 4. By not disclosing the actuality of his
identity and relying on direct action narrative
in par. 1, Staples allows the audience to view
the incident through the eyes of a white person
alone on the street at night. A less limited
perspective is used in the narrative section of
par. 7.
22Understanding the writers techniques
- 5. Heightens tensionundoes the effect suggested
by discreet, uninflammatory distance in the
previous sentence. - 6. Par. 1 Description of his appearance conveys
to readers why he might be perceived as menacing.
Par. 5 Description of womens defensive
reactions underscores the intensity of perceived
threat.
23Understanding the writers techniques
- 7. Thunk, thunk, thunk of door locks in par.
3allows the reader to feel more fully Stapless
sense of alienation and embarrassment. - 8. Seeing countless tough guys sent to prison
the violent deaths of friends and family members
his consequent desire to avoid a similar fate.
24Understanding the writers techniques
- 9. Hikers wear cowbells to alert bears to their
presence will in advance bears, like people, may
react violently when surprised or make afraid.
Stapless whistling is like a cowbell in that it
deters mistaken impressions on the part of those
who share his nignttime environment.
25Understanding the writers techniques
- 10. In par. 1. Staples represents a visual
stereotype of a dangerous black man only to
show, as the essay unfold, how unreliable such
stereotypes are. - 11. The article is probably primarily intended
for a white audiencethe mistakenness of the
stereotypes Staples addresses and the anger and
alienation they create are, as Staples suggests,
commonplaces for many blacks.