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Wednesday, February 13, 2019

A Comparison of Self-realization in Black Boy, Native Son, Rite Of Pass

low Boy, Native Son, Rite Of Passage, and The bulky vision Self-realization of a Black Man The white knowledge base dominates the political and social life in each of Richard Wrights books as Wright portrays the undying struggle that a young blackened male faces when growing up in the United States. Wrights Black Boy, Native Son, Rite Of Passage, and The big Dream are all bound by the common theme of self-realization. In all four books, the climax occurs when a black youth realizes his aspect in society and the ugly future that lies ahead of him. In his memorial Black Boy, Wright reveals his personal experience as a black maturing in a white society. The process of achieving self-realization is marked by all the verbal and physical battles that the main characters in Wrights books must fight. He makes win what all his characters experience, when he writes in Black Boy, I had never in my life been abused by whites, but I had already construct as conditioned to their existence as though I had been the dupe of a thousand lynchings (34). The powerful presence of whites in a black youths life is embedded since birth but emerges clearly during the period of self-realization for the black youth In Native Son, the main character, Bigger Thomas, lives in a one-room apartment with his m otherwise, brother, and sister in a black ghetto on the South Side of Chicago. Bigger sees whites through hate- and jealousy-filled eyes. Feelings of inferiority to whites consumes Biggers life. However, he tries to suffice his family by working for a wealthy, well-respected white family. But, in a routine of fear and hysteria, Bigger commits a murder that alters his life forever. Compared to the three other ... ... W. W. Norton and Company, 1982. 671-673. Marcus, Steven. Appiah 35-45. Macksey, Richard and Frank E. Moorer, eds. Richard Wright. Englewood, New Jersey Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1984. Margolies, Edward. Native Sons. Philadelphia J.B. Lippincott Company, 1968 . McCall, Dan. Wrights American Hunger. Appiah 259-268. Stepto, Robert. Literacy and Ascent Black Boy. Appiah, 226-254. Tanner, Laura E. Uncovering the Magical Disguise of Language The Narrative Presence in Richard Wrights Native Son. Appiah 132-146. Thaddeus, Janice. The Metamorphosis of Black Boy. Appiah 272-284. Wright, Richard. Black Boy. New York Harper and Row, 1945. _____. The Long Dream. New York Harper and Row, 1987. _____. Native Son. New York HarperCollins, 1993. _____. Rite of Passage. New York HarperCollins, 1994.

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