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Richard
Wright
(Born:
Sept. 4, 1908, near Natchez, Miss., U.S. Died: Nov. 28, 1960,
Paris, France), novelist and short-story
writer, who was among
the
first black
American writers to protest white
treatment of blacks, notably in his novel "Native
Son" (1940) and his autobiography, "Black Boy"
(1945). He inaugurated
the
tradition of protest explored by o
the
r black writers after World War II.
Wright's
grandparents had been slaves. His father left home when he was five, and
the
boy, who grew up in poverty, was often shifted from one relative to another.
He worked at a number of jobs before joining
the
northward migration, first to
Memphis
,
Tenn.
, and
the
n to
Chicago
. There, after working in
unskilled jobs, he got an opportunity to write through
the
Federal Writers' Project. In
1932 he became a member of
the
Communist Party, and in 1937 he went to
New York City
, where he became
Harlem
editor of
the
Communist Daily Worker.
He
first came to
the
general public's attention with
a volume of novellas, "Uncle Tom's Children" (1938),
based on
the
question: How can a black man
live in a country that denies his humanity? In each story but
one
the
hero's quest ends in death.
His
fictional scene shifted to
Chicago
in "Native Son." Its
protagonist, a poor black youth named Bigger Thomas,
accidentally kills a white girl, and in
the
course of his ensuing flight his hitherto meaningless awareness of
antagonism from a white world becomes intelligible. The book was
a best-seller and was staged successfully as a play on Broadway
(1941) by Orson Wells. Wright himself played Bigger Thomas in a
motion-picture version made in
Argentina
in 1951.
In
1944 he left
the
Communist Party because of
political and personal differences. Wright's "Black
Boy" is a moving account of his childhood and young manhood
in
the
South. The book chronicles
the
extreme poverty of his childhood, his experience of white prejudice and
violence against blacks, and his growing awareness and interest
in literature.
After
World War II, Wright settled in
Paris
as a permanent expatriate.
"The Outsider" (1953), acclaimed as
the
first American existential
novel, warned that
the
black man had awakened in a disintegrating society not ready to include
him. Three later novels were not well-received. Among his
polemical writings of that period was "White Man,
Listen!" (1957), which was originally a series of lectures
given in
Europe
. "Eight Men," a
collection of short stories, appeared in 1961.
The
autobiographical "American Hunger," which narrates
Wright's experiences after moving to
the
North, was published
posthumously in 1977. Some of
the
more candid passages dealing with race, sex, and politics in Wright's
books had been cut or omitted before original publication.
However, unexpurgated versions of "Native Son," Black
Boy" and his other works were published in 1991.
Unexpurgated
versions of Native Son, Black Boy, and his o
the
r works were published in 1991, however.
Bibliography:
Works
of biography and criticism include Robert Felgar,
"Richard
Wright" (1980); Addison
Gayle,
"Richard
Wright: Ordeal of a Native
Son" (1980); Michel Fabre, "The World of
Richard
Wright" (1985), and
"The Unfinished Quest of
Richard
Wright," translated. from
French, 2nd ed. (1993), Richard
Macksey and Frank E. Moorer
(eds.); "
Richard
Wright: A Collection of Critical
Essays" (1984); Keneth Kinnamon (ed.), "New Essays on
Native Son" (1990); Robert Butler, "Native Son: The
Emergence of a New Black Hero" (1991); Henry Louis Gates,
Jr., and K.A. Appiah (eds.),
"Richard
Wright: Critical Perspectives
Past and Present" (1993); and Robert Butler (ed.),
"The Critical Response to
Richard
Wright" (1995).
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