Analysis Of Richard Wright's Native Son

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In Native Son by Richard Wright, Bigger is subject to inequality because of his skin color. “Maybe they were right when they said that a black skin was bad, the covering of an apelike animal. Maybe he was just unlucky, a man born for dark doom, an obscene joke happening amid a colossal din of siren screams and white faces and circling lances of light under a cold and silken sky” (Wright 275). This white oppression creates a monster inside of him, causing him to murder a young woman. Yet Bigger Thomas is just another one of the hapless African Americans, whose oppressive environment molds him into a fearful, vengeful beast. To begin, African Americans living in the Black Belt during the 1930s, like Bigger Thomas, live in poverty. This teaches …show more content…

Bigger’s lawyer is questioning him before the trial about whether or not he rapes Mary. He responds to Max, “‘Naw. But everybody’ll say I did. What’s the use? I’m black. They say black men do that. So it don’t matter if I did or if I didn’t’” (349). Nevertheless, the State’s Attorney points out how, “‘… the central crime here is rape’” (413). In their eyes, he not only kills her, but he most definitely rapes her too. They quickly brand him as a rapist, because Bigger is nothing more to them than just another African American criminal. In the end, Bigger Thomas is a product of his environment, and he murders because he feels powerless. In fact, he mentions how, “‘We live here and they live there. We black and they white. They got things and we ain 't. They do things and we can 't. It 's just like living in jail. Half the time I feel like I 'm on the outside of the world peeping in through a knothole in the fence…’” (20). Bigger is not a character one sympathizes with or feels sorry for, but rather his actions are in direct relation to the way the countless whites treat him. The heinous crime he commits is one he believes is fate, because almost every white person has the preconceived notion that African Americans are the guilty ones. He is just another black monster, whose black skin condemns him to a bleak destiny. “He was their property, heart and soul, body and blood; what they did claimed every atom of him, sleeping and waking; it colored life and dictated the terms of death”

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