124 pages • 4 hours read
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During the investigation for Buffalo Bill, Crawford, and Lecter both act as mentors for Clarice. What do each of these men teach Clarice as she learns about investigating in the field? How are they similar and how are they different? Why? Use examples from the text to support your answer.
Compare Jame Gumb, Hannibal Lecter, and the other inmates of the Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. How does Harris highlight the similarities and differences between the criminals? Why is Lecter afforded a heightened level of respect and civility compared to the others? Use examples from the text to support your answer.
Clarice disguises her heritage and her impoverished upbringing to be taken seriously by her colleagues. How does her hypervigilance about appearances affect her behavior? What occurs when Clarice embraces her family history and her rural roots?
How does Clarice navigate the stereotyping and harassment she faces on the job as a woman? How do her efforts to change her outward demeanor compare or contrast with the other minor female characters in the book? Do any of these women successfully escape the biases they face?
Jame Gumb’s night vision goggles are a prominent symbol of his character, as is his labyrinthine basement. How do these symbols work to illuminate Gumb’s personality, motivations, and history?
In her final interview with Lecter, Clarice is escorted out before she can answer Lecter’s question about how she manages her anger. Using examples from the text, describe how Clarice manages her anger as a woman, as a student, and as someone from a lower-class background. Does Clarice’s anger management change over the course of the book? Why or why not? To what outcome?
Lecter tells Clarice that Chilton isn’t a real medical doctor and that his degrees and honors are fake. How do Chilton’s actions and personality support Lecter’s claim? What are the implications of this revelation?
Clarice, the FBI, and the field of psychology’s theories of behavior frequently fall short when applied to the events and people in the book. How do these textbook classifications both help and hinder Clarice during her investigation? Do you agree with Lecter that these categorizations are too simplistic to accurately describe people, both good and evil? Why or why not?
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