
In reviewing feedback on my students’ AP Literature* exam scores, I observed that they scored lower on the skills connected to explaining the function of setting. I use Yaa Gyasi’s novel Homegoing to teach these skills:
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- 2.A: Identify and describe specific textual details that convey or reveal a setting.
- 2.B: Explain the function of setting in a narrative.
- 2.C: Describe the relationship between a character and a setting.
Homegoing is a perfect text for teaching the function of a setting because of the overwhelming influence setting has on the characters. I typically teach this book with a discussion-heavy approach, which works well when you have classes that love discussion. I currently have a great class that loves to discuss the literature we are reading; however, I’m also approaching my teaching in general with more small-group activities designed to engage students in the text. I created a setting-based activity I plan to use in teaching Homegoing this year. It’s called “Setting as Shaper.”
As students read, they will annotate or collect 4–6 specific setting details, then sort them into categories:
- Physical environment (landscape, buildings, climate, geography)
- Social structures (laws, customs, power systems, economics)
- Historical moment (era-specific realities shaping daily life)
- Psychological atmosphere (fear, safety, confinement, belonging)
When they annotate, quote, or paraphrase the detail, they should identify where it appears and label the category.
After each reading, students will convene with a small group in class and discuss their observations. The group will select two setting details and answer: “What is the setting doing to the character in this chapter?”
Students will either choose from the following list or add your own idea:
- Restricting choices
- Enabling survival or resistance
- Reinforcing power hierarchies
- Shaping identity or self-perception
- Creating generational trauma
- Offering false or fragile safety
- Forcing moral compromise
After their discussion, they will write a 1-2 sentence claim about the setting in the chapter: In this chapter, the setting functions to ________, which shapes ________.
I am also going to have students create concept maps for each chapter. For Effia’s chapter, students will create a Belonging Map (see details below). The guiding questions for this particular chapter: Where does Effia belong? And where is she erased?
Effia’s chapter is fundamentally about conditional belonging. The Cape Coast Castle is simultaneously:
- a site of privilege and protection
- a site of moral erasure and violence
This map helps students analyze:
- how Effia belongs only by ignoring certain spaces
- how physical proximity does not equal moral or emotional access
Instructions for the Belonging Map:
- Draw concentric circles:
- Inner = belonging
- Middle = conditional belonging
- Outer = exclusion or danger
- Place locations, naming:
- Who grants or denies belonging?
- What is the cost of belonging?
- Unpack belonging maps together as a class.
Maps in Homegoing
| Chapter Type | Map | Applicable Chapters |
| Confinement / institutional | Pressure Map | “Esi,” “Ness,” “H” |
| Movement / transition | Before–Inside–After | “Kojo,” “Abena,” “Yaw,” “Marcus” |
| Moral compromise | Moral Geography | “Akua,” “Sonny” |
| Identity & displacement | Belonging Map | “Effia,” “Willie,” “Marjorie” |
| Power systems | Agency Spectrum | “Quey,” “James” |
Below, you can find some instructions for using these different concept maps:
| Map Type | Core Question(s) | How to Create | Annotations | Analytical Payoff | Best Used When | Other |
| Agency Spectrum Map
Focus: Power, choice, and limitation across different spaces |
Where does the character have agency? Where is that agency limited or illusory? |
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This map shows that agency is uneven and often depends on setting, not personality. |
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| Pressure Map (Setting as Force)
Focus: How the environment exerts control over the character |
What pressures does the setting apply, and how do they shape the character’s behavior or survival? |
Write 2–3 outcomes such as:
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This map treats setting as an active force, not background. |
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Types of pressure to consider:
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| Moral Geography Map
Focus: Ethics, compromise, and survival shaped by place |
What actions become normal or necessary in this setting, and why? |
Optional Visual Layer—Use symbols or colors to mark:
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Take notes on:
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This map shows that ethics are shaped by environment, not just individual values. |
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| Before – Inside – After Map
Focus: Transformation caused by entering a setting |
How does entering this setting change the character? | Divide your page into three sections:
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Include at least one specific textual detail in each section. (Annotate during the activity.) | This map highlights setting as a catalyst for change, not just a location. |
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A good way to differentiate for stronger students might be to have them choose the map for each chapter. You might give them instructions for how to choose that look something like this:
- Is this chapter about power? → Agency Spectrum
- Is it about constraint or survival? → Pressure Map
- Is it about ethical compromise? → Moral Geography
- Is it about change over time? → Before–Inside–After
- Is it about belonging or not belonging? → Belonging Map
Setting is never neutral. These maps help students explain what the setting does and why it matters , and should help strengthen students’ setting analysis skills. I’ll let you know how it goes!
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