Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Racism in Richard Wrights Black Boy Essay -- Wright Black Boy Essays
Racism in Wright's Black Boy              The theme of Richard  Wright's autobiography Black Boy is racism.  Wright     grew up in the deep South; the Jim Crow South of the early twentieth  century.     From an early age Richard Wright was aware of two races, the black and the  white.      Yet he never understood the relations between the two  races.   The fact that he     didn't understand but was always trying to, got him into trouble many  times.     When in Memphis, Wright reluctantly assumed the role society dictated for  him,     the role of a black boy.  He became a black boy for the sole purpose of  survival,     to make enough money to eventually move North where he could be himself.                   As an innocent child Wright sees  no difference between the blacks and     the whites.  Yet he is aware of the existence of a difference. "My  grandmother     who was as "white" as any "white" person, had never looked "white" to  me."     (Wright pg. 31).  This statement shows his confusion about blacks and  whites.     When, as a child Wright learned of a white man beating a black boy he  believed     that the white man was allowed to beat the black child.  Wright did not  think     that whites had the right to beat blacks because of their race.  Instead  he     assumed that the white man was the black boy's father.  When Wright  learned that     this was not true, and that the boy was beaten because of his race, he was  un     able to rationalize it. Even as he got older he didn't see the color of  people.     In one instance Richard and a friend are standing outside a shop when some  white     people pass by, Richard doesn't move to accomodate the white people because  he     simple didn't notice that they were white.     ..              ...ter.  It has enlightened me.  Before  reading this     book I could not have imagined the horrific truths of only a short while ago,  in     a place not so far away. Everyone could gain something from this book, for me  it     demonstrates that the human race was not, and is not as civilized as it  appears.           Works Cited and Consulted:     Appiah, K. A. and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds.  Richard Wright: Critical  Perspectives      Past and Present.  New York: Amistad Press, 1993.      Skerrett, Joseph T., Jr. "Wright and the Making of Black Boy." in Richard  Wright's      Black Boy:  Modern Critical Interpretations.  New York: Chelsea  House, 1988.      Stepto, Robert.  "Literacy and Ascent: Black Boy."  Appiah,  226-254.     Thaddeus, Janice.  "The Metamorphosis of Black Boy."  Appiah  272-284.      Wright, Richard.  Black Boy.  New York: Harper, 1944.                              
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