Native Son: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Line 20:
'''''Native Son''''' (1940) is a novel written by the American author [[Richard Wright (author)|Richard Wright]]. It tells the story of 20-year-old [[Bigger Thomas]], a black youth living in utter poverty in [[Douglas, Chicago|a poor area]] on Chicago's [[South Side (Chicago)|South Side]] in the 1930s. Thomas accidentally kills a white woman at a time when racism is at its peak and he pays the price for it. <ref>{{Cite book |last=Wright |first=Richard |title=Native Son |date=16 June 2009 |publisher=Harper Collins |isbn=978-0-06-193541-1}}</ref>
 
While not apologizing for Bigger's crimes, Wright portrays a systemic causation behind them. Bigger's lawyer, Boris Max, makes the case that there is no escape from this destiny for his client or any other black American, since they are the necessary product of the society that formed them and told them since birth who exactly they were supposed to be.
 
"No American Negro exists", [[James Baldwin]] once wrote, "who does not have his private Bigger Thomas living in his skull." [[Frantz Fanon]] discusses the feeling in his 1952 essay ''L'expérience vécue du noir'' (''The Fact of Blackness''). "In the end", writes Fanon, "Bigger Thomas acts. To put an end to his tension, he acts, he responds to the world's anticipation." The book was a successful and groundbreaking best seller. However, it was also criticized by Baldwin and others as ultimately advancing Bigger as a stereotype, and not a real character.