FRIDAY
NIGHT LIGHTS
FOR DISCUSSION
1. Considering the experiences of Boobie Miles and Brian Chavez,
for example, what role does football play in their lives and in
the lives of the people of Odessa?
Does football play a similar role in your own community?
To what extent does Boobie and Brian's ambitions and experiences
prepare each of them differently for life after football?
2. Of the Odessa team preparing for the game
against Midland Lee, Bissinger writes that “the perfection of their equipment, …the
solemn ritual that was attached to almost everything, made them
seem like boys going off to fight a war for the benefit of someone
else, unwitting sacrifices to a strange and powerful god.” (11)
In what ways might they be viewed as “unwitting sacrifices”?
How would you describe the “strange and powerful god” to
whom they were being sacrificed?
3. Bissinger notes that the tradition of Odessa's
Permian Panthers “was
enshrined on a wall of the field house” (24) and also “in
the county library, where the 235-page history that had been written
about Permian football was more detailed than any of the histories
about the town itself.”
What conclusions concerning Odessa might be drawn from the fact
that its high-school football program is valued more highly than
the town's history?
What value does your community place on high school sports?
4. How does what Bissinger characterizes as “the hearty,
hair-trigger temperament of the place” affect our view of
Odessa and its residents' attitudes and behavior?
What examples of this “hearty, hair-trigger temperament” do
you observe in your own community or on the national level?
In what ways might it be seen as characteristically American?
5. In what ways does race influence the attitudes and behavior
of Odessa's high-school athletes, coaches, teachers, parents, and
fans?
What examples of, and explanations for, continuing racism in Odessa
does Bissinger provide?
Do you see similar examples in your own community?
6. Of Boobie Miles, Bissinger writes, “He had the rawness,
the abandon, the unbridled meanness.” And Bissinger makes
much of the orneriness, fearlessness, and aggressiveness of many
of Odessa's football players, past and present—and of many
of the town's other citizens.
What value do those attributes have for the football players and
the community?
What other personal qualities might be of equal or greater value?
7. What do Bissinger's descriptions of classroom activity and
teacher's behavior at Permian High School reveal about the role
of education in the lives of the students and adults of Odessa?
To what extent are those descriptions pertinent
to your own school and community? What might explain, and who
is responsible for, the “devastating erosion in standards” (131)
that many of the teachers cite?
Why do you agree or disagree with Bissinger's
statement that the school's “problems didn't make Permian a bad school at all,
just a very typically American one”? (132)
8. References to “values” appear throughout Friday
Night Lights , and Bissinger repeatedly quotes statements of Odessans
and others, including George Bush (Sr.), in support of “values”—“the
most important buzzword,” writes Bissinger, “to be
added to the lexicon of American politics in the 1988 election.” (187)
What does the word values mean to each of those who use it and
how might those meanings have changed since the book was published?
9. What differences exist between the two communities of Odessa
and Midland, and how do those differences affect each community's
view of itself and the other?
How does social class inform those views?
10. What incidences of “delusional visions of grandeur [and]
the mercenary mercilessness that made every relationship expendable” (216)
appear in the book?
Although Bissinger writes that Midland perfected these traits,
what role do they play in Odessa, particularly in relationship
to the Permian Panthers?
What are some of the consequences for the players, coaches, and
families of making every relationship expendable?
11. Bissinger writes of team trainer Trapper
O'Connell's end-of-season perspective: “A new set of kids, a new set of faces, a new
set of hopes, a new set of heroes would be paraded atop the shoulders
of the town as gloriously as the Greeks honored their gods.” (285) “That's
my salvation,” says Trapper.
“What's their salvation?” (285)
What do you think the kids' salvation might be?
12. What specific examples does Bissinger cite of the roles of
fans, coaches, teachers, parents, and school administrators in
the treatment of high-school football players?
How accountable should school officials and parents be for the
behavior of players?
13. The Odessa American maintains a ten-years-later website pertaining
to issues raised by and in Friday Night Lights www.oaoa.com/specialsections/fridaylights/fridaylights.htm.
In what ways might the comments, ten years later, by various people
featured in Friday Night Lights contribute to a fuller understanding
of the role that high-school football played in Odessa at that
time and today?
14. How are the issues examined by Bissinger—for example:
communal, racial, political, economic, and class related—relevant
to you, your family, and your neighbors?
Which issues play the greatest role in your community, and why?
|