Comparing Richard Wright And James Baldwin

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Race was a major feature of the 20th century which witnessed the birth of two leading African American writers, Richard Wright, and James Baldwin, both of whom were vastly influential in African American literature and the civil rights movement at the time. Their literary works were concerned with the experiences of the African American people, especially in relation to race relations and the African-American experience. Into this matter, I suggest an analysis of both Richard Wright's and James Baldwin's point of view of the race relations and white-black experience discussed in the aforementioned paper. The young African American who was a character in Native Son in Bigger Thomas received the exposure to life according to this novel by Richard …show more content…

This is a specific idea that is also expressed in Wright's story, where the whole topic is of fear of death and violence in Bigger is always there in the text. Furthermore, in addition to dealing with themes of racial violence and poverty, both writers also spoke a great deal about the influence of an education in molding African American personalities. Black Boy is a Wright's book which goes to the heart of the issue of how to make it out as a black man through education. He narrates his journey from a know-nothing child to a proficient writer. This concept is also present in Baldwin's article, "The Discovery of What it Means to Be an American," wherein he points out this and I quote, "education is not enough, it is just a bridge towards a definite end" (Baldwin 25). Also, both the authors had strong criticism of the racial stereotypes propounded by mainstream white society. Wright's book, Native Son, chastises the portraiture of African Americans in white literature and media. He comments "the Negro has been consistently portrayed as a beast or a monster" (Wright 15). This line is also in Baldwin's essay, "The Harlem Ghetto," where he argues that the need to defy these labels and submit a better image of African Americans is imperative. James Baldwin, who was a writer, was deeply moved by the writings of Richard Wright, between the lines of the letter of the African Americans' lives, and the significance of change in race relations. The two of them described these issues, such as violence of a racial nature, deprivation due to poverty, and lack of education, extensively

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