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Native Son Shards of a Man Bigger Essay

Pages:2 (582 words)

Subject:People

Topic:Richard Wright

Document Type:Essay

Document:#75575389


Native Son

Shards of a Man

Bigger Thomas was born from the recesses of the experience of Richard Wright, all throughout the varying stages of his life. The author encountered a number of individuals, beginning with his childhood in Mississippi, who were decidedly countercultural as well as antisocial, who thought only to do whatsoever they pleased, and who were fated to live with the consequences, whatsoever those may be. Oftentimes, these Bigger Thomas's who White would eventually base the protagonist in his novel Native Son upon, were African-American, and were reviled by and rebelled against the Jim Crow system that disenfranchised them. Later in the author's life, particularly when he spent some time in Chicago, he would contend that he met other Bigger Thomas's; these latter of which happened to be of a Caucasian nationality. Wright was able to make a composite for his protagonist out of all the Bigger Thomas's that he experienced throughout his life, in order to make the powerful statement that he does about the state of social and economic power and its lack of equity in the United States within Native Son.

The spirit that animated nearly all of the Bigger Thomas's that the author encountered was decidedly misanthropic, often times simply for the sake of being misanthropic. Or rather, this spirit was invoked because of a sense of isolation and despair caused by being rendered virtually impotent by a harsh, uncaring American society that would afford no positive consequences for these young men, such as Bigger No. 1, the childhood bully. This individual was only pleased when he was bullying others and spoiling their fun -- for the simple fact that doing so was the only time in which he was able to…


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