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Notes Divided City TCH NotesBC

This document provides teaching notes and context for the book "Divided City" by Theresa Breslin. It summarizes the plot of the book, which explores historic divisions and loyalties between communities in Britain through the perspectives of two boys. It also outlines how the book could be used in the classroom to promote discussion of social and moral issues. Key areas of the literacy curriculum that the book relates to are identified, such as exploring different perspectives, social attitudes, and promoting debate.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
180 views13 pages

Notes Divided City TCH NotesBC

This document provides teaching notes and context for the book "Divided City" by Theresa Breslin. It summarizes the plot of the book, which explores historic divisions and loyalties between communities in Britain through the perspectives of two boys. It also outlines how the book could be used in the classroom to promote discussion of social and moral issues. Key areas of the literacy curriculum that the book relates to are identified, such as exploring different perspectives, social attitudes, and promoting debate.

Uploaded by

Goyo
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DIVIDED CITY by Theresa Breslin

TEACHING NOTES by Bridget Carrington

DIVIDED CITY (Corgi 2006) ISBN : 0 552 55188 0

Reading Age 9+
Interest Level 10+

Theresa Breslin is the critically acclaimed author of over 30 books whose


work has been filmed for television and dramatised for radio. She has
been described as an outstanding writer who combines a powerful sense
of drama with memorable characters and superb storytelling. She writes
for all age groups covering most fiction genres with some titles especially
suitable as EAL readers. She won the Carnegie Medal, the most
prestigious award in children’s literature, for Whispers in the Graveyard,
her compelling story of a dyslexic boy.
More information on website: theresabreslin.com

Bridget Carrington has taught in the primary sector over the last thirty
years. She has an MA in Children's Literature and her research for this
will form part of the forthcoming Pied Piper Publishing ‘Neglected
Children’s Authors’ book A Victorian Quartet.

She is currently researching the early history of writing for young adults for
a doctorate at Roehampton University. She writes about, reviews, and

First and foremost the book should be read for enjoyment, and
analysis of its material should never be allowed to detract from this,
its primary intention.

DIVIDED CITY – Some Reviews:


Compelling… this humane and edgy story prickles and nudges the reader
towards tolerance and understanding of other communities. TES
A cracking good read…(Breslin) creates characters we both believe in and like.
THE GUARDIAN
A complex honourable book which explores which explores the historic roots of
its characters' loyalties and beliefs.-THE BOOKSELLER
A powerful novel to provoke, intrigue and inform…. It will promote the kind of
debate necessary to inform and educate, and thereby face the truths behind the
everyday behaviour which still dominates life in many areas of the British Isles.
B. CARRINGTON, WRITEAWAY WEBSITE
A skilfully plotted page-turner… Football allegiances are tied up with other deep
rooted prejudices and passions… the issues are presented in the thoughts and
words of the two boys, and in dialogue - always fast and dramatic, sometimes
heart-warmingly funny. INIS. Irish Book Review Journal
1
Curriculum Context
Divided City could be used as a cross curricular resource for
Key Stage 2 Years 5 & 6 and Key Stage 3 Literacy/English, Citizenship
and PSHE, as well as RE.

In the National Literacy Strategy Framework document (2/98) the


following areas are relevant, all building on work undertaken in earlier KS
2 objectives such as

Year 4 Term 3
Text level work:
To identify social, moral or cultural issues in stories, e.g. dilemmas
faced by characters or the moral of a story, and to discuss how
characters deal with them, to locate evidence in text

Year 5 Term 1
Text level work:

Reading comprehension
1 to analyse the features of a good opening and compare a number
of story openings;
2 to compare the structure of different stories, to discover how they
differ in pace, build-up, sequence, complication and resolution;
3 to investigate how characters are presented, referring to the text:
through dialogue, action and description;
how the reader responds to them (as victims, heroes, etc.);
through examining their relationships with other characters;
4 to consider how texts can be rooted in the writer’s experience, e.g.
historical events and places, experience of wartime, friendship, holidays

Year 5 Term 3
Text level work:

Reading comprehension
1 to investigate a range of texts from different cultures,
considering patterns of relationships, social customs, attitudes
and beliefs:
identify these features by reference to the text;
consider and evaluate these features in relation to their own
experience;
2 to identify the point of view from which a story is told and
how this affects the reader.s response;
3 to change point of view, e.g. tell incident or describe a situation
from the point of view of another character or perspective;

Writing composition
7 to write from another character.s point of view e.g. retelling
an incident in letter form;

2
Year 6 Term 1
Text level work:

Reading comprehension
2 to take account of viewpoint in a novel through, e.g.:
identifying the narrator;
explaining how this influences the reader’s view of events;
explaining how events might look from a different point of
view;
3 to articulate personal responses to literature, identifying why
and how a text affects the reader;
4 to be familiar with the work of some established authors, to
know what is special about their work, and to explain their
preferences in terms of authors, styles and themes;
5 to contribute constructively to shared discussion about
literature, responding to and building on the views of others;

Writing composition
6 to manipulate narrative perspective by:
writing in the voice and style of a text;
writing a story with two different narrators;
7 to plan quickly and effectively the plot, characters and
structure of their own narrative writing;
9 to prepare a short section of story as a script, e.g. using
stage directions, location/setting

Year 6 Term 2
Text level work:

Reading comprehension
1 to understand aspects of narrative structure, e.g.:
how chapters in a book (or paragraphs in a short story or chapter)
are linked together;
how authors handle time, e.g. flashbacks, stories within stories,
dreams;
how the passing of time is conveyed to the reader;
2 to analyse how individual paragraphs are structured in writing,
e.g. comments sequenced to follow the shifting thoughts of a character,
examples listed to justify a point and reiterated to give it force
8 to analyse the success of texts and writers in evoking particular
responses in the reader, e.g. where suspense is well-built;

Writing composition
10 to use different genres as models to write, e.g. short extracts,
sequels, additional episodes, alternative endings, using appropriate
conventions, language;
12 to study in depth one genre and produce an extended piece of
similar writing, e.g. for inclusion in a class anthology; to plan, revise, re-
draft this and bring to presentational standard, e.g. layout, paragraphing,
accuracy of punctuation and spelling, handwriting/printing;

3
14 to write commentaries or summaries crediting views expressed by
using expressions such as .The writer says that..;

Year 6 Term 3
Writing composition
7 to annotate passages in detail in response to specific
questions;
8 to use a reading journal effectively to raise and refine
personal responses to a text and prepare for discussion;
9 to write summaries of books or parts of books, deciding on
priorities relevant to purpose;
10 to write a brief synopsis of a text, e.g. for back cover blurb;
11 to write a brief helpful review tailored for real audiences;
12 to compare texts in writing, drawing out:
their different styles and preoccupations;
their strengths and weaknesses;
their different values and appeal to a reader;;
14 to write an extended story, worked on over time on a theme
identified in reading

In the Key Stage 3 Framework for teaching English: Year 7, 8 & 9, the
following areas are relevant:

Year 7
Sentence level
Vocabulary
Standard English and language variation
15. vary the formality of language in speech and
writing to suit different circumstances;
16. investigate differences between spoken and written
language structures, e.g. hesitation in speech;

Understanding the author’s craft


12. comment, using appropriate terminology on
how writers convey setting, character and
mood through word choice and sentence
structure;
14. recognise how writers’ language choices can
enhance meaning, e.g. repetition, emotive
vocabulary, varied sentence structure or line
length, sound effects;
15. trace the ways in which a writer structures a text
to prepare a reader for the ending, and comment
on the effectiveness of the ending;
16. distinguish between the attitudes and
assumptions of characters and those of the
author;

4
Study of literary texts
17. read a range of recent fiction texts
independently as the basis for developing
critical reflection and personal response, e.g.
sharing views, keeping a reading journal;

Write to persuade, argue, advise


15. express a personal view, adding persuasive
emphasis to key points, e.g. by reiteration,
exaggeration, repetition, use of rhetorical
questions;

Write to analyse, review, comment


18. identify criteria for evaluating a particular
situation, object or event, present findings fairly
and give a personal view;

Group discussion and interaction


14. acknowledge other people’s views, justifying or
modifying their own views in the light of what
others say;

Year 8
Sentence level
Vocabulary
Standard English and language variation
11. understand the main differences between standard
English and dialectal variations, e.g subject-verb
agreement, formation of past tense, adverbs and
negatives, use of pronouns and prepositions;

Text level – Reading


Reading for meaning
4. review their developing skills as active, critical
readers who search for meaning using a range of
reading strategies;
5. trace the development of themes, values or
ideas in texts;
6. recognise bias and objectivity, distinguishing facts
from hypotheses, theories or opinions;
7. identify the ways implied and explicit meanings
are conveyed in different texts, e.g. irony, satire;

Understanding the author’s craft


10. analyse the overall structure of a text to
identify how key ideas are developed, e.g.
through the organisation of the content and
the patterns of language used;
11. investigate the different ways familiar themes are
explored and presented by different writers;

5
Study of literary texts
12. record and review the development of their
independent reading, and identify ways of
increasing its scope and challenge;
13. read a substantial text (novel, play or work of
one poet) revising and refining interpretations
of subject matter, style and technique;
16. recognise how texts refer to and reflect the
culture in which they were produced, e.g. in their
evocation of place and values.

Write to persuade, argue, advise


13. present a case persuasively, making selective
use of evidence, using appropriate rhetorical
devices and anticipating responses and
objections;
14. develop and signpost arguments in ways that
make the logic clear to the reader;
15. give written advice which offers alternatives and
takes account of the possible consequences, e.g.
money management for young people;

Write to analyse, review, comment


16. weigh different viewpoints and present a
balanced analysis of an event or issue;

Group discussion and interaction


9. reflect on their individual strengths as
contributors to group talk and identify points and
opportunities for development;
10. use talk to question, hypothesise, speculate,
evaluate, solve problems and develop
thinking about complex issues and ideas;
11. recognise and build on other people’s
contributions;
12. take different roles in discussion, helping to
develop ideas, seek consensus and report the
main strands of thought;

6
Year 9
Consolidation of objectives from previous years.

The following themes and topics would be relevant when using Divided
City:

Citizenship/PSHE/RE

Rights and responsibilities


Human rights
Diversity – national, regional, religious, ethnic
Conflict resolution
Perception of social/class distinctions
How to bring about social change
Attitudes to mental illness
Friendship and loyalty
Intergenerational relationships
Cultural heritage
Religious heritage
Prejudice: religious, racial, class
Migration, refugees and asylum seekers
How opinions are formed

‘Deprivation, and all that goes with it, is what really divides this
city.’ (Graham’s Dad, p.160)

He was aware of how difficult it might be for them, given their


differences in background and culture, but this vibrant mixture
was the essence of Glasgow. (of Jack Burns, p.186)

Synopsis
Glasgow in May: a young man lies bleeding on the street...Graham
doesn't want to get involved. He just wants to play football with his new
mate, Joe. But he witnesses a shocking moment of violence, and he gets
caught up in injustice, prejudice and religious rivalries old and new.
Theresa Breslin tackles the seemingly eternal question of religious
intolerance, emphasizing its longstanding influence on the everyday lives
of communities by introducing a very twenty-first century issue - Islam
and asylum seeking - into the centuries old conflict between Catholic and
Protestant in Glasgow. Graham, a keen Rangers supporter, comes from
a traditional Protestant family in a middle class area of the city. His
Granda Reid is a passionate Orangeman, and hopes that his grandson
will march in the forthcoming Orange Walk, the visible proof of the
strength of Protestant feeling in a city of divided religions. Graham's
parents are educated professionals, more tolerant, less certain of the
wisdom in displays of religious power. Joe, Celtic supporter, brought up

7
in his Catholic faith by a deeply religious family whose outspoken and
sometimes violent advocacy of their religion suffuses their working class
city estate. Yet he too has access to more measured opinions to leaven
his attitudes, his father, an educated, thoughtful man and his Aunty
Kathleen, who insists the family leave their partisan Catholic opinions at
the door when they enter her house for Sunday lunch.
United by their love of football, and the club they play for, and their
attempts to help Kyoul, a Muslim asylum seeker, the victim of religiously
inspired torture in his own country and racial attack in Glasgow, each
works through the passions of his own family's religious heritage. Each
comes out the stronger for facing the issues in his own life, first accepting
and finally rejecting the comforting, unquestioned prejudices which
ignorance of the lives of others lulls us in to. A powerful novel to provoke,
intrigue and inform Key Stage 3 and older readers, which will promote the
kind of debate necessary to inform and educate, and thereby face the
truths behind the everyday behaviour which still dominates life in many
areas of the British Isles.

Characters
Graham, only child, Rangers supporter from a middle class family and
area of Glasgow
Joe Flaherty, Celtic supporter from an extensive working class family and
area of Glasgow
Kyoul, Muslim asylum seeker, subject of religious and racially motivated
violence
Leanne, Kyoul’s girl friend from an expensive area of Glasgow
Graham’s Mum and Dad, educated professionals, overprotective but fair
Joe’s Dad, PhD in political history, suffering from depression and unable
to work since the death of Joe’s Mum
Jammy, one of Joe’s many cousins, who is unquestioningly partisan
Granda Reid, Joe’s grandfather and a proud and lifelong Orangeman
Joe’s Grandma, staunchly Catholic, but willing to befriend anyone
Aunt Kathleen, Joe’s aunt who bans partisan football talk in her house
Uncle Tommy, Kathleen’s husband and Partick Thistle supporter
Uncle Desmond, an aggressive Celtic supporter
Aunt Rita, his wife
Bernadette, Joe’s cousin, a nurse at the City Hospital
Mr Sinclair, the patient in the next bed to Kyoul, World War II veteran
Jack Burns, Joe and Graham’s football coach, seeking to unite young
football players whatever their background

Setting
Time: the present
Place: Glasgow:
streets in Catholic and Protestant areas of the city,
the protagonists’ homes in run down, comfortable, and affluent
housing areas,
the City Hospital, & Religious Museum & Central Art Gallery
Celtic and Rangers football grounds.

8
Structure and Style
Short (4-9 pages) chapters which tell the story chronologically: 230 pages
divided into 45 chapters
• Opening: the reader is immediately engaged in Graham’s
dilemma – alone, taking a short cut in a part of the city his
parents ban him from, catapulted into a situation over which he
has no control

Extracts from DIVIDED CITY


Footsteps.
Running. (p.1)…
Footsteps.
Running. (p.2)…
‘Get the scum ! Asylum scum !’ (p.2)…
‘Scum ! Scum !’ (p.3)…
‘We’ve got him ! He’s here !’…
Nothing. No scream. No cry for help.
Then footsteps. Running away. Diminishing…
A dark stain spreading. (p.4)

Short sentences, with phrases repeated at intervals in the text


create a claustrophobic intensity of experience, indicating both the speed
of the pursuit and Graham’s fear.

• Inciting Moment: witnessing the attack and then asked for help
by the stabbed Kyoul, Graham must decide whether to run
away, or incur complications and consequences by summoning
help and agreeing to do a favour for the attacked boy. He
stays, holding Kyoul’s hand, giving him hope and life (p.24),
certainly saving his life, but thereby possibly compromising his
own comfortable existence. He and Kyoul are now ‘brothers’,
united by trouble (p.15).

• Development: we are introduced to Joe, walking home


carefree, who while his team mate Graham faces life and death
issues in the back streets, is daydreaming of scoring the
winning goal for Scotland in the World Cup (p.8-10). Despite
their different backgrounds, Graham seeks his help in fulfilling
the promise he has made Kyoul.

• Climax: Graham and Joe are forced into subterfuge to help


Leanne, to visit Kyoul in hospital, and to avoid their families
realizing what they are doing, and that each boy comes from a
totally different, misunderstood and hated background, religion
and cultural heritage.

• Denouement: Graham must also decide whether to march with


the Orangemen, as his Grandfather wishes. He does, but in

9
the knowledge that pride in his cultural identity must never
overcome his ability to judge people as individuals.

• Resolution: each boy learns about the other’s religion and


cultural heritage and discovers the depth of ignorance,
intransigence and the stupidity and dangers inherent in this
prejudice. An outstanding act of selflessness and generosity
on the part of Mr Stanley saves Kyoul from homelessness and
immediate deportation. We will never know the final outcomes,
but we are left with hope…

Extract from DIVIDED CITY

‘…it’s good you’re both still trying to be friends.


It gives us hope, doesn’t it ?’
(p.210)

Narration and Point of View


Although dealing with universal questions, Theresa Breslin identified the
primary audience for Divided City as being teenaged boys. She is
particularly concerned with promoting and encouraging boys’ reading,
literacy and literature and the subject matter was chosen partly with this
in mind. Having chosen her subject – the experience of asylum seekers
in big cities – she set the book in Glasgow, already a stronghold of
ancient religious and cultural rivalries, and decided that immediacy of
language and constant action were best suited to its topics – football and
adolescent male city life - and target audience.
She realized that, as an adult female, she had to ‘observe, listen and
absorb’ adolescent male culture to portray it accurately and meaningfully
for her readers.

Both Joe and Graham are intensely loyal to their cultural and religious
backgrounds, and Chapters 4, 7 and 15 explain the history, feelings and
expressions of identity of Protestants and Catholics in Glasgow, and how
they are manifested in the life of the city, while Chapter 33 parallels them
by giving the background of prejudice in their own countries and in Britain
experienced by asylum seekers and refugees. Breslin is entirely even-
handed in exposing the roots of their cultural identity, its manifestation
and ingrained prejudice and misconceptions about groups seen as
historic rivals. It is in the final Chapter that the prospect of Glasgow City,
a football team which unites young men, capitalizing on their strengths
despite their differences, which encourages them to ‘behave like grown
men…in some cases better than grown men’ (p. 230) offers a
constructive future away from sectarian intolerance. Joe and Graham’s
footballing daydream interludes may presage a positive future in more
than sport alone.

10
Teaching Suggestions

Aims:
• to encourage informed reflection and discussion on the themes
and issues raised in Divided City
• to encourage wider reading of books with similar issues and
themes
• to promote reading, literacy and literature amongst boys

In addition to the specific NLS Framework objectives and


Citizenship/PSHE/RE themes and topics detailed above, Divided City
could be studied for further specific

Discussion Topics

Characterization:
• Graham and Joe come from very different backgrounds and
beliefs. How does the author engage us with Graham and Joe?
Are we encouraged to favour one sectarian point of view over
another? Why not? How does the author prevent this happening?
• Both boys have family members who represent extremes of
opinion. Why do they hold different degrees of loyalty to their
culture and religion? Who do we feel sympathy for? Do we
despise any of the characters for their opinions?
• Kyoul tells very little of his own story. How does the author fill in
the detail? Who tells us? What does their background add to our
understanding of their account of asylum seekers?
• There are characters from three generations in each family. How
do their views differ? Why do you think this is so? What factors
affect how you form opinions?

City Culture:
• Graham encounters a gang and witnesses a stabbing, but admits it
to no one. Why do you think he keeps quiet about this?
• When Kyoul asks him a perfectly reasonable favour, and the boys
try to fulfil it, Graham and Joe’s relatives are afraid that they are
getting caught up in something which they see as a far greater
danger. What is it that they are frightened of, and why do you
think this is constantly in adults’ minds?

Football Rivalry:
• During and after the Celtic v Rangers games there are many
examples of hatred and violence between the sides. What are
they? How are they continued outside of the football ground, and
every day?
• What lies beneath the rivalry between the teams and their
supporters? How does each side justify their opinions? Do you

11
consider their opinions to be sensible and based on fact or
misunderstanding?
• Although Glasgow’s football rivalry is ancient and notorious, what
aspects of this hatred and violence are also evidence in other
football supporters elsewhere? Can you think of or research
chants and slogans which reflect this?

Emotion:
• The boys hold back from overt displays of emotion. Why does Joe
keep quiet about his mother’s death and his father’s mental
illness?
• In what situations do the boys feel able to show emotion? Why do
you think this is?
• Do you think girls would display emotion differently, and for
different reasons? Why?

Friendship:
• ‘You have to work at friendship, Joe’ says his father (p. 208).
Chapter 22 is a crucial point in the development of a real friendship
between Joe and Graham. Between entering and leaving the
church their relationship has changed. What happens (or doesn’t
happen) which allows the boys to move closer together in their
friendship? How does this influence Joe’s reaction to the Orange
Walk?
• In the final chapter Joe makes an offer of supreme sacrifice to
prove the depth of his friendship for Graham. Although it’s funny, it
is deeply significant. Why do you think this is?

Conflict:
• Look at Chapter 27, which begins and ends with almost the same
sentence. During this the boys discuss their allegiances, mainly
repeating what they have heard adults saying as though they are
indisputable. Do their different points of view affect their
relationship? Do boys deal with conflict in a particular way?
• Peer/family pressure: how do Joe and Graham cope with this? Is
either of them bullied into conforming?
• ‘…these wombles ’ says Jammy (p. 214). What other terms are
used by the Catholics and Protestants to describe their enemies
and indicate their contempt?

Opinions:
• Graham and Joe repeat the opinions which older members of their
families hold, yet through the boys’ own experiences in the book,
they also learn to question them. How are our opinions formed?
How far do we take them from others? What makes us question or
move away from historical attitudes towards others?

Citizenship- wider implications:


• Theresa Breslin’s dedication states: ‘This book is for Glasgow’. As
well as the topics mentioned earlier in these notes, Divided City
considers the power of a city over its citizens, their identification
12
with it as an entity, and their conviction that it is somehow ‘special’.
Look at page 222 and the final chapter as a whole. Where and by
whom is this put into words?

Creative Projects and Activities

• Girls as well as boys are keen football fans. Both could be


encouraged to research the formation of and historical roots of
particular rivalries between their team and others. How relevant
were the causes of these rivalries, and are they still really pertinent
today? What do different generations of supporters feel?
• Migrant workers/refugees/asylum seekers/ethnic minorities. In
many classes some or all of these will be represented. Students
could be encouraged to find out about the numbers and
experience of any of these in their own local area. What difference
does it make when you really know one of these people? How
does it change your perception of the whole question? How can
we improve understanding and tolerance amongst ourselves, and
influence others along this path? Students could be encouraged to
devise realistic strategies for their school, and the wider
community.
• There is a horrible and almost irresistible attraction for us all in the
rude, crude and cruel remarks used against those we dislike or
don’t understand. Students could attempt to create alternative
slogans for use with rival teams or groups which concentrate on
their own strengths and celebrate difference rather than using it as
a weapon to insult or create enmity.
• Press and media frequently are the major creators/perpetuators of
unpleasant sporting rivalry and anti-immigration views. Students
could identify and research examples locally and nationally, and
confront the perpetrators to gauge why this is allowed to continue
despite informed opinion and legislation which deplores it.

And after all this?

What can students do in the future to begin to influence racist/religious


attitudes, and in particular to help asylum seekers? Is there a local
organization which provides support? Ensuring that they are working
in a safe environment with appropriate supervision, can they befriend
newcomers, offer help with interpreting, learning English, fitting in and
understanding British life?

Useful websites
http://www.theresabreslin.co.uk/index.htm
http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/authors/Theresa_Breslin.htm

13

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