character
conflict
setting
themes
artist's choices
100

Who is the protagonist who travels between the 1970s and the Weylin plantation and narrates much of the adaptation?

Dana

100

Which central conflict is described in the quiz as "the main problem in the story"?

 Dana must survive being pulled into slavery-era and it affects her life

100

what is the main historical setting Dana travels to?

A Maryland plantation (1800s).

100

why do slave owners dehumanize slaves

power, dominance

100

Name one visual element (listed in the quiz) that shows Dana’s feeling when she jumps back to the present

Close-up, color, or facial expression

200

Name the white male character whose survival repeatedly connects Dana to the past and whose relationship with Dana is complex and central to the story

Rufus
200

How does Dana react to Rufus' racism? Give an example of what he says or does to show he is racist

says n-word

200

What do the colors symbolize?

give an example

200

how the patroller beating (pages 49–50) connects to the theme of survival or dehumanization in one sentence.

The beating forces Dana into survival mode, it shows dehumanization and violence

200

 what palette is used on page 34 and what mood does it create?

Purples, blues, and browns creating a dramatic, heavy mood.)

300

Describe Kevin’s role in Dana’s life and one way his presence affects her when she returns to the present

 Kevin is Dana’s husband/partner; he supports her physically/emotionally—e.g., attends to her when she convulses or reacts after a trip

300

Dana is beaten by a patroller. What type of conflict is this? Name one way this connects the story’s conflict and connects to a theme.

 It makes survival immediate and personal; connects to dehumanization and power.

300

 identify a textual device 

What are ways the narrator tells the setting  

map, calendar, family tree

300

dentify and explain a quote (from the provided panel analysis) that links Dana to her ancestor Alice and how that connection complicates family obligations or survival.

 "NOT ONLY TO ENSURE THE SURVIVAL OF ONE WEAK BOY, BUT MY FAMILY'S SURVIVAL, MY OWN BIRTH."—shows survival is interwoven with kin obligations and lineage.

300

 Describe how onomatopoeia (e.g., "Klok")shows violence and power .

auditory punch in the visual medium—marks physical impact, emphasizes abrupt reversal of power, and forces the reader to feel the moment viscerally

400

Identify two family members mentioned on the panel-analysis family diagram and explain briefly how their presence complicates Dana’s sense of identity.

Hagar Weylin and Alice; 

Hagar’s record ties Dana into the Weylin family tree and Alice connects Dana as an ancestor,

400

—give two examples of Dana's life in danger

mother beats her, Patrollers beats her

500

Who is Weylin?

plantation owner /slave master

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