Discussion Questions: Anne of Green
Gables
Reflection
1.
Did
you find the end of Anne satisfying?
Why or why not? What moral(s), if any, did you see the book as promoting?
Class Discussion
1.
How
do the illustrations impact your reading of the text?
2.
Perry
Nodelman provides a lengthy list of criteria that define children’s literature
(Hintz and Tribunella 53). How does Anne
fit these criteria? How does it resist them? Would you add or subtract any
criteria from Nodelman’s list? The criteria:
a.
The
implication of children as readers
b.
The
use of a simple style
c.
The
focus on action rather than description
d.
The
use of apparent simplicity to mask hidden complexities
e.
A
matter-of-fact tone despite the strangeness of the events described
f.
Focalization
through a child’s perspective and the use of child protagonists
g.
A
doubleness of perspective created by the differences between the perspective of
child characters and the voice of a presumably adult third-person narrator
h.
The
focus on innocence and knowledge acquisition as central subjects
i.
A
pervasive sense of nostalgic and ambivalence
j.
The
importance of home and leaving home
3.
In
what ways does the text frame “scope of imagination,” as Anne calls it, as a
uniquely juvenile ability? In what ways is this idea detached from childhood?
4.
In
this section, Montgomery emphasizes some of the differences between Anne’s
socioeconomic status and that of the other girls at Queen’s. What is the
significance of these discrepancies?
5.
In
what ways is Anne similar to fairy
tales starring young women? In what ways is it different?
6.
Anne
reacts to city life differently than some of her peers. What does this reaction
say about her character?
7.
How
do Anne’s perceptions of romance evolve over the course of the novel?
8.
In
the final section of the book, we get several insights into Anne’s views of the
future. How do these relate to ideas about the role of childhood in the scope
of a full human life? (In other words, how do young adults, adults, and older
adults interact differently with ideas about the future?)
9.
From
Arthur Pober’s questions (300): How is Anne like Marilla?
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