Directions:
After reading chapters 4 and 5 of The Color of Water by James McBride, answer EIGHT of the following discussion questions in the comments section of the blog. Be sure to complete this by midnight WEDNESDAY.:
Chapter 4: Black Power
1. Characterize Ruth’s parenting style. How does that style influence the relationship between McBride and his siblings?
2. McBride writes, “Yet Mommy refused to acknowledge her whiteness” (23). In what ways does she register this refusal?
3. McBride describes the effect black power has on his neighborhood, and he suggests his appreciation for aspects of it, but he has fears for his mother in relation to this movement. Why is he afraid for his mother?
4. Ruth’s rules for her children include a combination of privacy, good grades, and distrust of others. Why would she suggest such a policy?
5. McBride writes, “Mommy’s house was an entire world that she created” (27). Describe that world and the manner in which it functions.
6. McBride says that Ruth’s childhood experiences offered “the best and worst of the immigrant mentality” as a model (29). What does he mean, and how does this influence Ruth’s philosophy of life and, therefore, that of her children?
7. McBride writes, “Yet conflict was a part of our lives, written into our very faces, hands, and arms, and to see how contradiction lives and survived in its essence, we had to look no further than our own mother” (29). How is conflict written into the McBride children’s very bodies? How did contradiction live and survive in his mother?
8. How doe Ruth respond to insults?
9. What role does religion/spirituality play in Ruth’s life?
Chapter 5: The Old Testament
10. How would you characterize the life Ruth has with her family in Suffolk?
11. How does her first husband change her life?
12. Why is this chapter called “The Old Testament”?