"Black Boy"
"Black Boy"
An analysis of the book "Black Boy" by Richard Wright, with a focus on the author's relationship with his mother and grandmother.
1,379 words (
approx. 5.5 pages) |
1 source |
MLA | 2007
Paper Summary:
The paper describes how "Black Boy" is the autobiographical story of author Richard Wright as he grew up in Mississippi and other southern towns. The paper portrays the gripping story of hatred, prejudice and determination. The paper looks at the story that shows how the support of his family, especially his mother, kept Wright determined to make something of himself although his religious grandmother never thought much of him and helped to cast doubt on his future as a writer. This, however, provided him with the tools to make up his own mind and express his feelings. The paper stresses how, in his life, both women influenced him in differing ways and molded him into the man he became.
From the Paper:
"Wright's life as a young boy painted his entire life, and much of that came from the influence of his family (good and bad). His mother was very strict with him, but loved him and usually supported the things he wanted to do. However, she was not afraid to backhand him if she felt it was necessary. Early in the book he writes, "She [his mother] slapped me and I cried. Later, grudgingly, she told me that Granny came of Irish, Scotch, and French stock in which Negro blood had somewhere and somehow been infused" (Wright 48). He lives in a world of secrets kept by the grownups, from murder to why whites hate blacks so much, and that affects his adult life, too. He does not like the secrets, and develops an inquisitive mind that wants to know more and questions just about everything. This will certainly enhance his career as a writer, for it allows him to look at a question from all sides and assess its' meaning before he makes up his mind and writes about it."
Sample of Sources Used:
- Wright, Richard. Black Boy: American Hunger. New York: First Perennial Classics, 1998.
"Black Boy" (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 12, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Book-Review-Black-Boy/94449
""Black Boy"" 15 January 2012. Web. 12 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Book-Review-Black-Boy/94449>