Thursday, May 29, 2014

Identity Formation


Identity
Objective: Students will be challenged to consider their own identity formation, and how this can affect their perspectives and actions by reading and analyzing "Lather and Nothing Else" by Hernando Tellez. Lesson plan can be done in three 50 min. periods.

California Language Arts Standards Grade 7:
Reading: 3, 4, 5
Writing: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Listening and Speaking: 1a, 1c, 1d, 3, 4

Supplies needed:
Students - journal notebook, pen, colored pencils and paper
Handout of story with discussion questions included, Charts #'s 1, 2, 3
Teacher – white board, colored markers

Day 1:

Students write in a journal notebook:

How would you describe yourself?
Use any words (adjectives) or phrases that come to mind
and would fit in this sentence in 2 minutes:
"I am ________ "

Now try to complete as many of these sentences as you can in 3 minutes
I am a ________
I am a ________
I am a ________

Teacher's Explanation and Discussion
What is the difference between these two sentences?
What changed with the adding of an article "a"?

In general the first sentence helps you describe characteristics or character traits about yourself.
The second sentence is to help you begin to understand how you see yourself in relation to other people, and the world around you. It asks what groupings or classification of people do you see yourself as being a part of. In short: How do you identify yourself?

This is an ongoing process that will continue the rest of your life but is particularly critical at this stage of your life because the decisions you make about identity at your age will have the longest range effects.

What or whom is significant to you, will have a large effect on how you see yourself and how you view others and interpret the world around you.

"The concept of identity is a complex one, shaped by individual characteristics, family dynamics , historical factors and social and political contexts. Who am I? The answer depends in large part on who the world around me says I am. Who do my parents say I am? Who do my peers say that I am? What message is reflected back to me in the faces of my teacher, my neighbors, store clerks? What do I learn form the media about myself? Tatum, Beverly Daniel, PH.D..Why Are All The Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? And Other Conversations About Race New York: Basic Books, 1997.

Students continue writing in their notebook:
We are all looking for who we are similar to, where we seem to fit in, belong etc.
Try to explain the above quote in your own words. Respond to the ideas presented here.
Think: How do you know what your face looks like?
Use hand held mirror as example.
This helps me to see what I cannot see on my own.
Who or where is your mirror?
Where are you looking for feedback?

Teacher will read and explain the following quote in simpler terms for the students to understand more easily.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_(social_science)

Identity may be defined as the distinctive characteristic belonging to any given individual, or shared by all members of a particular social category or group. Identity may be distinguished from identification; the former is a label, whereas the latter refers to the classifying act itself. Identity is thus best construed as being both relational and contextual, while the act of identification is best viewed as inherently processual.[1]
However, the formation of one's identity occurs through one's identifications with significant others (primarily with parents and other individuals during one’s biographical experiences, and also with 'groups' as they are perceived). These others may be benign such that one aspires to their characteristics, values and beliefs (a process of idealistic-identification), or malign when one wishes to dissociate from their characteristics (a process of defensive contra-identification) (Weinreich & Saunderson 2003, Chapter 1, pp 54–61).

Teacher explains:

Identity is a social construct.
What labels or categories would be able to be applied to you?
Examples: geographical racial ethnic, hobbies, interests, relationships
What groupings of people would you place yourself in?"

Now, add to your list in your journal other identities that come to mind - 3 minutes.

However, out of all the possible groupings I might realistically fit in, some will be more important to me than others. Go back over your list in your journal entry and rewrite what you listed in order of significance or importance to you, starting with what is more important to you first. What do you most identify with?
Which fit but you don't feel are significant or close to really describing who you are?
Which of these would you 'own' as being significant or important to you?

Did the order stay relatively the same? When you first were asked to write, what came to mind quickly?

What came to mind only after thinking for a while. Why do you think that is?


It is interesting to notice what came to mind first and what I list as first in order of importance. What might this show?

How we view ourselves has a large effect on how we view others.
example of reading glasses - they clarify
example of sunglasses - they color what we see
no one is bias free - but it helps to know where yours are

The more you are aware of and recognize your biases the more you can be aware of how they do influence you. Where you are coming from will affect what you see and where you are going. Example: Being an athletic person probably influences whether you see others in varying degrees of being athletic or not.

Homework: Look up the following words and write down all the different meanings, forms, parts of speech and spellings. Test is in 3 days. Words: identity, regime, responsibility, indifference, conscientious, painstaking, rejuvenated, tranquil, cowardly, indelible


Day 2-3 Will go as far as possible one day and pick up where we left off the next day.

Go over vocabulary for the story we are about to read.

This story does not front load information to you at the beginning.
You need to be a detective and look for clues to piece it all together.

"Lather and Nothing Else" by Hernando Tellez

He came in without a word. I was stropping my best razor. And when I recognized him, I started to shake. But he did not notice. To cover my nervousness, I went on honing the razor. I tried the edge with the tip of my thumb and took another look at it against the light.
Meanwhile, he was taking off his cartridge studded belt with the pistol holster suspended from it. He put it on a hook in the wardrobe and hung his cap above it. Then he turned full around toward me and, loosening his tie, remarked, "It's hot as the devil. I want a shave." With that he took his seat.

Fill in what you can on chart 1 on setting and characters. What can you figure out so far?
What can we deduce from what the author does give us? What does he not give, why?

Setting:
time


place



Characters
1.

2.


I estimated he had a four-days growth of beard, the four days he had been gone on the last foray after our men. His face looked burnt, tanned by the sun.
I started to work carefully on the shaving soap. I scraped some slices from the cake, dropped them into the mug, then added a little lukewarm water and stirred with the brush. The later soon began to rise.
"The fellows in the troop must have just about as much beard as I." I went on stirring up lather.
"But we did very well, you know. We caught the leaders. Some of them we brought back dead; others are still alive. But they'll all be dead soon."


2. What can you add to your chart? Why are the following words, keys to opening up this story and what is going on here?
"our men"
"troop"
"leaders"


How many did you take?” I asked.
Fourteen. We had to go pretty far in to find them. But now they're paying for it. And not one will escape; not a single one.”
He leaned back in the chair when he saw the brush in my hand, full of lather. I had not yet put the sheet on him. I was certainly flustered. Taking a sheet from the drawer, I tied it around my customer's neck.
He went on talking. He evidently took it for granted that I was on the side of the existing regime.


3. What can you add to your chart? What insight do the following words give us?
"existing regime"
"our men"


The people must have gotten a scare with what happened the other day,”he said.
Yes,” I replied, as I finished tying the know against his nape, which smelt of sweat.
Good show, wasn't it?”
Very good,” I answered, turning my attention now to the brush. The man closed his eyes wearily and awaited the cool caress of the lather.
I had never had him so close before. The day he ordered the people to file through the schoolyard to look upon the four rebels hanging there, my path had crossed his briefly. But the sight of those mutilated bodies kept me from paying attention to the face of the man who had been directing it, all and whom I now had in my hands.
It was not a disagreeable face, certainly. And the beard, which aged him a bit, was not unbecoming. His name was Torres. Captain Torres.


4. What can you add to chart #1 now?


I started to lay on the first coat of lather. He kept his eyes closed.
I would love to catch a nap,” he said, “but there's a lot to be done this evening.”
I lifted the brush and asked with pretended indifference: “A firing party?”
"Something of the sort,” he replied, “but slower.”
"All of them?”
No, just a few.”
I went on lathering his face. My hands began to tremble again. The man could not be aware of this, which was lucky for me. But I wished he had not come in. Probably many of our men had seen him enter the shop. And with the enemy in my house I felt a certain responsibility.

5. Discuss what he means by 'responsibility' here? Who is he referring to? What do they think he should do?




I would have to shave his beard just like any other, carefully, neatly, just as though he were a good customer, taking heed that not a single pore should emit a drop of blood. Seeing to it that the blade did not slip in the small whorls. Taking care that the skin was left clean, soft, shining, so that when I passed the back of my hand over it not a single hair should be felt. Yes, I was secretly a revolutionary but at the same time I was a conscientious barber, proud of the way I did my job. And that four day beard presented a challenge.

6. What are two of his identities? How are they now in conflict? How do they led to different actions and paths? Fill in on chart #1.

I took up the razor, opened the handle wide, releasing the blade, and started to work, downward from one side burn. The blade responded to perfection. The hair was tough and hard; not very long, but thick. Little by little the skin began to show through. The razor gave out its usual sound as it gathered up layers of soap mixed with bits of hair. I paused to wipe it clean, and taking up the strop once more went about improving its edge, for I am a painstaking barber.
The man, who had kept his eyes closed, now opened them, put a hand out from under the sheet, felt of the part of his face that was emerging from the lather, and said to me, “Come at six o’clock this evening to the school.”
Will it be like the other day?” I asked, stiff with horror.
It may be even better,” he replied.
"What are you planning to do?”
I'm not sure yet. But we'll have a good time.”
Once more he leaned back and shut his eyes. I came closer, the razor on high.
Are you going to punish all of them?” I timidly ventured.
Yes, all of them.”
The later was drying on his face. I must hurry. Through the mirror, I took a look at the street. It appeared about as usual; there was the grocery shop with two or three customers. Then I glanced at the clock, two-thirty.

7. Now work on chart 2 on Conflict: Fill in each category for the each of these men.
Identities How that affects his view of others What behavior would result?
1. barber

2. Captain Torres

The razor kept descending. Now from the other side burn downward. It was a blue beard, a thick one. He should let it grow like some poets, or some priests. It would suit him well. May people would not recognize him. And that would be a good thing for him, I thought, as I went gently over all the throat line. At this point you really had to handle your blade skilful, because the hair, while scantier, tended to fall into small whorls. It was a curly beard. The pores might open, minutely , in this area and let out a tiny drop of blood. A good barber like myself stakes his reputation on not permitting that to happen to any of his customers.
And this was indeed a special customer. How many of ours had he sent to their death? How many had he mutilated? It was best not to think about it. Torres did not know I was his enemy. Neither he nor the others knew it. It was a secret shared by very few, just because that made it possible or me to inform the revolutionaries about Torres's activities in the town and what the planned to do every time he went on one of his raids to hunt down rebels. So it was going to be very difficult to explain how it was that I had him in my hands ad then let him go in peace, alive, clean-shaven.


8. What can you now add to chart 2? How does this illuminate the conflict this man is facing?


His beard had now almost entirely disappeared. He looked younger, several years younger than when he had come in. I suppose that always happens to men who enter and leave barbershops. Under the strokes of my razor, Torres was rejuvenated; yes, because I am a good barber, the best in this town, and I say this in all modesty.
A little more lather here under the chin, on the Adam's apple, right near the great vein. How hot it is! Torres must be sweating just as I am. But he is not afraid. He is a tranquil man, who is not even giving thought to what he will do to his prisoners this evening. I, on the other hand, polishing his skin with this razor but avoiding the drawing of blood, careful with every stroke – I cannot keep my thoughts in order.
Confound the hour he entered my shop! I am a revolutionary but not a murderer.


9. "I am a revolutionary not a murderer." Try to explain this statement in your own words. Where do these overlap? Where do they differentiate?

And it would be so easy to kill him. He deserves it. Or does he?No! No one deserves the sacrifice others make in becoming assassins. What is to be gained by it? Nothing. Others and still others keep coming, and the first kill the second, and then these kill the next, and so on until everything becomes a sea of blood. I could cut his throat, so, swish, swish! He would not even have time to moan, and with his eyes shut he would not even see the shine of the razor or the gleam in my eye.


10. Rewrite this passage in your own words and explain. Can you think of any examples to support this idea from history or current events?


I'm sure that with a good strong blow, a deep cut, he would feel no pain. He would not suffer at all. And what would I do then with the body? Where would I hide it? I would have to flee, leave all this behind, take shelter far away, very far away. But they would follow until they caught up with me. “The murderer of Captain Torres. He slit his throat while he was shaving him. What a cowardly thing to do.”
And others would ay, “The avenger of our people. A name to remember” - my name here. “He was the town barber. No one knew he was fighting for our cause.”


  1. What can you fill in on chart # 3 of how this barber is attempting to make this difficult decision by doing a cost benefit analysis.

Choice Cost Benefit
1.


2.


And so , which will it be? Murderer or hero? My fate hangs on the edge of this razor blade. I can turn my wrist slightly, put a bit more pressure on the blade, let it sink in. The skin will yield like silk, like rubber, like the strop. There is nothing more tender than a man's skin, and the blood is always there, ready to burst forth. A razor like this cannot fail. It is the best one I have.


  1. Predict what do you think he will do and why? What do you think you would do and why?
But I don't want to be a murderer. No, sir. You came in to be shaved. And I do my work honorably. I don't want to stain my hands with blood. Just with lather, and nothing else. You are an executioner; I am only a barber. Each one to his job. That's it. Each one to his job.

13. What did he decide and why? How many times do you need to do something for it to affect your identity and character?


The chin was now clean, polished, soft. The man got up and looked at himself in the glass. He ran his hand over the skin and felt its freshness, its newness.
Thanks” he said. He walked to the wardrobe for his belt, his pistol, and his cap. I must have been very pale, ad I felt my shirt soaked with sweat. Torres finished adjusting his belt buckle, straightened his gun in its holster, and smoothing his hair mechanically, put on his cap. From his trousers pocket he took some coins to pay for the shave. And he started toward the door. On the threshold he stopped for a moment, and turning toward me he said,
They told me you would kill me. I came to find out if it was true. But it's not easy to kill. I know what I'm talking about.”

14. Explain in your own words. How does this change everything you have read and understood so far?

Homework: Writing Dialogue
Write a conversation or dialogue using correct punctuation and format between
- yourself and one of the characters in the story
- the barber and his rebel friends as he tries to explain his decision
- the barber and Captain Torres after his last statement

How does the author's use of dialogue enhance characterization and raise interest verses using more narration in this story? Write out the event of this story without any dialogue. What changes?


Writing Assignments:

1. 5 paragraph expository essay on theme for this story.

Identify a theme for this story
Find evidence from the story to show how the author presents and supports this idea.
How would the story be written differently to support a different theme from the same situation?

Work on outline of both evidence and argumentation to show the theme of this story.




2. Personal Writing
Journal entry: Think of a time when you experienced having an identity conflict. Describe what brought about this conflict and how you responded and why?
How did you choose to see yourself and why?
How did it turn out and why?
If you could go back and do anything differently, what would you and why?



    3. Research Assignment

Using the Internet, look up background information on the author and the history of the country he is from. Write how this affects your understanding of the story. Also look up any present day examples and explain how they relate to the ideas presented in this story.

Sample Resources:


people who look like their dogs – funny but true photos


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolivia to learn about Bolivia

Identity
Objective: Students will be challenged to consider their own identity formation, and how this can affect their perspectives and actions by reading and analyzing "Lather and Nothing Else" by Hernando Tellez. Lesson plan can be done in three 50 min. periods.

California Language Arts Standards Grade 7:
Reading: 3, 4, 5
Writing: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Listening and Speaking: 1a, 1c, 1d, 3, 4

Supplies needed:
Students - journal notebook, pen, colored pencils and paper
Handout of story with discussion questions included, Charts #'s 1, 2, 3
Teacher – white board, colored markers

Day 1:

Students write in a journal notebook:

How would you describe yourself?
Use any words (adjectives) or phrases that come to mind
and would fit in this sentence in 2 minutes:
"I am ________ "

Now try to complete as many of these sentences as you can in 3 minutes
I am a ________
I am a ________
I am a ________

Teacher's Explanation and Discussion
What is the difference between these two sentences?
What changed with the adding of an article "a"?

In general the first sentence helps you describe characteristics or character traits about yourself.
The second sentence is to help you begin to understand how you see yourself in relation to other people, and the world around you. It asks what groupings or classification of people do you see yourself as being a part of. In short: How do you identify yourself?

This is an ongoing process that will continue the rest of your life but is particularly critical at this stage of your life because the decisions you make about identity at your age will have the longest range effects.

What or whom is significant to you, will have a large effect on how you see yourself and how you view others and interpret the world around you.

"The concept of identity is a complex one, shaped by individual characteristics, family dynamics , historical factors and social and political contexts. Who am I? The answer depends in large part on who the world around me says I am. Who do my parents say I am? Who do my peers say that I am? What message is reflected back to me in the faces of my teacher, my neighbors, store clerks? What do I learn form the media about myself? Tatum, Beverly Daniel, PH.D..Why Are All The Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? And Other Conversations About Race New York: Basic Books, 1997.

Students continue writing in their notebook:
We are all looking for who we are similar to, where we seem to fit in, belong etc.
Try to explain the above quote in your own words. Respond to the ideas presented here.
Think: How do you know what your face looks like?
Use hand held mirror as example.
This helps me to see what I cannot see on my own.
Who or where is your mirror?
Where are you looking for feedback?

Teacher will read and explain the following quote in simpler terms for the students to understand more easily.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_(social_science)

Identity may be defined as the distinctive characteristic belonging to any given individual, or shared by all members of a particular social category or group. Identity may be distinguished from identification; the former is a label, whereas the latter refers to the classifying act itself. Identity is thus best construed as being both relational and contextual, while the act of identification is best viewed as inherently processual.[1]
However, the formation of one's identity occurs through one's identifications with significant others (primarily with parents and other individuals during one’s biographical experiences, and also with 'groups' as they are perceived). These others may be benign such that one aspires to their characteristics, values and beliefs (a process of idealistic-identification), or malign when one wishes to dissociate from their characteristics (a process of defensive contra-identification) (Weinreich & Saunderson 2003, Chapter 1, pp 54–61).

Teacher explains:

Identity is a social construct.
What labels or categories would be able to be applied to you?
Examples: geographical racial ethnic, hobbies, interests, relationships
What groupings of people would you place yourself in?"

Now, add to your list in your journal other identities that come to mind - 3 minutes.

However, out of all the possible groupings I might realistically fit in, some will be more important to me than others. Go back over your list in your journal entry and rewrite what you listed in order of significance or importance to you, starting with what is more important to you first. What do you most identify with?
Which fit but you don't feel are significant or close to really describing who you are?
Which of these would you 'own' as being significant or important to you?

Did the order stay relatively the same? When you first were asked to write, what came to mind quickly?

What came to mind only after thinking for a while. Why do you think that is?


It is interesting to notice what came to mind first and what I list as first in order of importance. What might this show?

How we view ourselves has a large effect on how we view others.
example of reading glasses - they clarify
example of sunglasses - they color what we see
no one is bias free - but it helps to know where yours are

The more you are aware of and recognize your biases the more you can be aware of how they do influence you. Where you are coming from will affect what you see and where you are going. Example: Being an athletic person probably influences whether you see others in varying degrees of being athletic or not.

Homework: Look up the following words and write down all the different meanings, forms, parts of speech and spellings. Test is in 3 days. Words: identity, regime, responsibility, indifference, conscientious, painstaking, rejuvenated, tranquil, cowardly, indelible


Day 2-3 Will go as far as possible one day and pick up where we left off the next day.

Go over vocabulary for the story we are about to read.

This story does not front load information to you at the beginning.
You need to be a detective and look for clues to piece it all together.

"Lather and Nothing Else" by Hernando Tellez

He came in without a word. I was stropping my best razor. And when I recognized him, I started to shake. But he did not notice. To cover my nervousness, I went on honing the razor. I tried the edge with the tip of my thumb and took another look at it against the light.
Meanwhile, he was taking off his cartridge studded belt with the pistol holster suspended from it. He put it on a hook in the wardrobe and hung his cap above it. Then he turned full around toward me and, loosening his tie, remarked, "It's hot as the devil. I want a shave." With that he took his seat.

Fill in what you can on chart 1 on setting and characters. What can you figure out so far?
What can we deduce from what the author does give us? What does he not give, why?

Setting:
time


place



Characters
1.

2.


I estimated he had a four-days growth of beard, the four days he had been gone on the last foray after our men. His face looked burnt, tanned by the sun.
I started to work carefully on the shaving soap. I scraped some slices from the cake, dropped them into the mug, then added a little lukewarm water and stirred with the brush. The later soon began to rise.
"The fellows in the troop must have just about as much beard as I." I went on stirring up lather.
"But we did very well, you know. We caught the leaders. Some of them we brought back dead; others are still alive. But they'll all be dead soon."


2. What can you add to your chart? Why are the following words, keys to opening up this story and what is going on here?
"our men"
"troop"
"leaders"


How many did you take?” I asked.
Fourteen. We had to go pretty far in to find them. But now they're paying for it. And not one will escape; not a single one.”
He leaned back in the chair when he saw the brush in my hand, full of lather. I had not yet put the sheet on him. I was certainly flustered. Taking a sheet from the drawer, I tied it around my customer's neck.
He went on talking. He evidently took it for granted that I was on the side of the existing regime.


3. What can you add to your chart? What insight do the following words give us?
"existing regime"
"our men"


The people must have gotten a scare with what happened the other day,”he said.
Yes,” I replied, as I finished tying the know against his nape, which smelt of sweat.
Good show, wasn't it?”
Very good,” I answered, turning my attention now to the brush. The man closed his eyes wearily and awaited the cool caress of the lather.
I had never had him so close before. The day he ordered the people to file through the schoolyard to look upon the four rebels hanging there, my path had crossed his briefly. But the sight of those mutilated bodies kept me from paying attention to the face of the man who had been directing it, all and whom I now had in my hands.
It was not a disagreeable face, certainly. And the beard, which aged him a bit, was not unbecoming. His name was Torres. Captain Torres.


4. What can you add to chart #1 now?


I started to lay on the first coat of lather. He kept his eyes closed.
I would love to catch a nap,” he said, “but there's a lot to be done this evening.”
I lifted the brush and asked with pretended indifference: “A firing party?”
"Something of the sort,” he replied, “but slower.”
"All of them?”
No, just a few.”
I went on lathering his face. My hands began to tremble again. The man could not be aware of this, which was lucky for me. But I wished he had not come in. Probably many of our men had seen him enter the shop. And with the enemy in my house I felt a certain responsibility.

5. Discuss what he means by 'responsibility' here? Who is he referring to? What do they think he should do?




I would have to shave his beard just like any other, carefully, neatly, just as though he were a good customer, taking heed that not a single pore should emit a drop of blood. Seeing to it that the blade did not slip in the small whorls. Taking care that the skin was left clean, soft, shining, so that when I passed the back of my hand over it not a single hair should be felt. Yes, I was secretly a revolutionary but at the same time I was a conscientious barber, proud of the way I did my job. And that four day beard presented a challenge.

6. What are two of his identities? How are they now in conflict? How do they led to different actions and paths? Fill in on chart #1.

I took up the razor, opened the handle wide, releasing the blade, and started to work, downward from one side burn. The blade responded to perfection. The hair was tough and hard; not very long, but thick. Little by little the skin began to show through. The razor gave out its usual sound as it gathered up layers of soap mixed with bits of hair. I paused to wipe it clean, and taking up the strop once more went about improving its edge, for I am a painstaking barber.
The man, who had kept his eyes closed, now opened them, put a hand out from under the sheet, felt of the part of his face that was emerging from the lather, and said to me, “Come at six o’clock this evening to the school.”
Will it be like the other day?” I asked, stiff with horror.
It may be even better,” he replied.
"What are you planning to do?”
I'm not sure yet. But we'll have a good time.”
Once more he leaned back and shut his eyes. I came closer, the razor on high.
Are you going to punish all of them?” I timidly ventured.
Yes, all of them.”
The later was drying on his face. I must hurry. Through the mirror, I took a look at the street. It appeared about as usual; there was the grocery shop with two or three customers. Then I glanced at the clock, two-thirty.

7. Now work on chart 2 on Conflict: Fill in each category for the each of these men.
Identities How that affects his view of others What behavior would result?
1. barber

2. Captain Torres

The razor kept descending. Now from the other side burn downward. It was a blue beard, a thick one. He should let it grow like some poets, or some priests. It would suit him well. May people would not recognize him. And that would be a good thing for him, I thought, as I went gently over all the throat line. At this point you really had to handle your blade skilful, because the hair, while scantier, tended to fall into small whorls. It was a curly beard. The pores might open, minutely , in this area and let out a tiny drop of blood. A good barber like myself stakes his reputation on not permitting that to happen to any of his customers.
And this was indeed a special customer. How many of ours had he sent to their death? How many had he mutilated? It was best not to think about it. Torres did not know I was his enemy. Neither he nor the others knew it. It was a secret shared by very few, just because that made it possible or me to inform the revolutionaries about Torres's activities in the town and what the planned to do every time he went on one of his raids to hunt down rebels. So it was going to be very difficult to explain how it was that I had him in my hands ad then let him go in peace, alive, clean-shaven.


8. What can you now add to chart 2? How does this illuminate the conflict this man is facing?


His beard had now almost entirely disappeared. He looked younger, several years younger than when he had come in. I suppose that always happens to men who enter and leave barbershops. Under the strokes of my razor, Torres was rejuvenated; yes, because I am a good barber, the best in this town, and I say this in all modesty.
A little more lather here under the chin, on the Adam's apple, right near the great vein. How hot it is! Torres must be sweating just as I am. But he is not afraid. He is a tranquil man, who is not even giving thought to what he will do to his prisoners this evening. I, on the other hand, polishing his skin with this razor but avoiding the drawing of blood, careful with every stroke – I cannot keep my thoughts in order.
Confound the hour he entered my shop! I am a revolutionary but not a murderer.


9. "I am a revolutionary not a murderer." Try to explain this statement in your own words. Where do these overlap? Where do they differentiate?

And it would be so easy to kill him. He deserves it. Or does he?No! No one deserves the sacrifice others make in becoming assassins. What is to be gained by it? Nothing. Others and still others keep coming, and the first kill the second, and then these kill the next, and so on until everything becomes a sea of blood. I could cut his throat, so, swish, swish! He would not even have time to moan, and with his eyes shut he would not even see the shine of the razor or the gleam in my eye.


10. Rewrite this passage in your own words and explain. Can you think of any examples to support this idea from history or current events?


I'm sure that with a good strong blow, a deep cut, he would feel no pain. He would not suffer at all. And what would I do then with the body? Where would I hide it? I would have to flee, leave all this behind, take shelter far away, very far away. But they would follow until they caught up with me. “The murderer of Captain Torres. He slit his throat while he was shaving him. What a cowardly thing to do.”
And others would ay, “The avenger of our people. A name to remember” - my name here. “He was the town barber. No one knew he was fighting for our cause.”


  1. What can you fill in on chart # 3 of how this barber is attempting to make this difficult decision by doing a cost benefit analysis.

Choice Cost Benefit
1.


2.


And so , which will it be? Murderer or hero? My fate hangs on the edge of this razor blade. I can turn my wrist slightly, put a bit more pressure on the blade, let it sink in. The skin will yield like silk, like rubber, like the strop. There is nothing more tender than a man's skin, and the blood is always there, ready to burst forth. A razor like this cannot fail. It is the best one I have.


  1. Predict what do you think he will do and why? What do you think you would do and why?
But I don't want to be a murderer. No, sir. You came in to be shaved. And I do my work honorably. I don't want to stain my hands with blood. Just with lather, and nothing else. You are an executioner; I am only a barber. Each one to his job. That's it. Each one to his job.

13. What did he decide and why? How many times do you need to do something for it to affect your identity and character?


The chin was now clean, polished, soft. The man got up and looked at himself in the glass. He ran his hand over the skin and felt its freshness, its newness.
Thanks” he said. He walked to the wardrobe for his belt, his pistol, and his cap. I must have been very pale, ad I felt my shirt soaked with sweat. Torres finished adjusting his belt buckle, straightened his gun in its holster, and smoothing his hair mechanically, put on his cap. From his trousers pocket he took some coins to pay for the shave. And he started toward the door. On the threshold he stopped for a moment, and turning toward me he said,
They told me you would kill me. I came to find out if it was true. But it's not easy to kill. I know what I'm talking about.”

14. Explain in your own words. How does this change everything you have read and understood so far?

Homework: Writing Dialogue
Write a conversation or dialogue using correct punctuation and format between
- yourself and one of the characters in the story
- the barber and his rebel friends as he tries to explain his decision
- the barber and Captain Torres after his last statement

How does the author's use of dialogue enhance characterization and raise interest verses using more narration in this story? Write out the event of this story without any dialogue. What changes?


Writing Assignments:

1. 5 paragraph expository essay on theme for this story.

Identify a theme for this story
Find evidence from the story to show how the author presents and supports this idea.
How would the story be written differently to support a different theme from the same situation?

Work on outline of both evidence and argumentation to show the theme of this story.




2. Personal Writing
Journal entry: Think of a time when you experienced having an identity conflict. Describe what brought about this conflict and how you responded and why?
How did you choose to see yourself and why?
How did it turn out and why?
If you could go back and do anything differently, what would you and why?



    3. Research Assignment

Using the Internet, look up background information on the author and the history of the country he is from. Write how this affects your understanding of the story. Also look up any present day examples and explain how they relate to the ideas presented in this story.

Sample Resources:


people who look like their dogs – funny but true photos

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolivia to learn about Bolivia

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