Author | Andrew Clements |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Subject | Racism |
Genre | Children's fiction |
Published | 2001, Boston Globe (serialization) 2003, Atheneum Books |
Media type | Print, ebook |
Pages | 89 pages |
ISBN | 0756914345 |
The Jacket is a 2001 children's book by author Andrew Clements. [1] It was first published in 2001 as a serialized story that ran in the Boston Globe and was later published in book format on August 1, 2003 through Atheneum Books. [2] [3] The work centers upon a young boy that discovers that although he doesn't identify as racist or discriminatory, he does have deep-seated and unconscious prejudices that prompt him to immediately suspect the worst about a black student at his school.
Clements based the book's premise around a similar situation that occurred in his life, where his brother mistakenly believed that an African-American boy had stolen his jacket and confronted him over the theft. [2] Since its release, the book has been utilized in classrooms as a way to illustrate different types of racism. [4]
Schoolboy Phil has never viewed himself as racist, but he's forced to rethink his stance when he accuses Daniel of stealing an imported jacket. Daniel, who is African-American, was given the jacket as a gift by his grandmother, who works for Phil's mother as a housekeeper and had received the jacket as a hand-me-down. Phil immediately begins to rethink his actions, wondering if he would have treated the situation differently if Daniel had been white instead of black. Tortured by self-doubt, Phil looks at his immediate surroundings and is saddened when he realizes that he has likely been influenced by his father, who is openly bigoted.
Critical reception was mostly positive. [5] [6] [7] Publishers Weekly praised The Jacket, commenting that while the book lacked subtlety, it "pointedly delivers a timely message and can serve as a springboard for dialogue about tolerance and self-honesty". [8]
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