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56 pages 1 hour read

Geoffrey Canada

Fist, Stick, Knife, Gun: A Personal History of Violence

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Adult | Published in 1995

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After Reading

Discussion/Analysis Prompt

In Chapter 8, Canada accidentally cuts himself with a knife. This incident seems relatively minor, but his ineptitude with the knife embarrasses him, as does his awkward attempt to bandage the wound and conceal it from his mother.

How does the episode with the knife speak to the book’s larger themes, particularly those of Codes of Machismo and The Destabilizing Impact of Guns, or other weapons? Additionally, does it foreshadow any later experiences in the book?

Teaching Suggestion: This episode marks an escalation in the danger Canada faces and foreshadows even more dangerous episodes to come. Owning the knife changes Canada, and he realizes that the weapon is like a “passport” that allows him to move through foreign and dangerous neighborhoods (91). This foreshadows the transformation Canada will undergo when he buys a gun. While the knife accident harms him in a permanent but non-life-threatening way, the concealed gun’s effect on Canada is more serious. It fills him with an overwhelming sense of anger. He states in Chapter 10: “I knew if It continued to carry the gun in the Bronx it would simply be a matter of time before I was forced to use it” (116). His experience with the knife is an early warning of the dangers of weapons and the false bravery that comes with carrying them.

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