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Search results on "NATIVE SON":

Essay # 58780 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Native Son" and "The Street", 2004.
A comparison of Richard Wright's "Native Son" with Ann Petry's "The Street" from a naturalist perspective.
3,514 words (approx. 14.1 pages), 14 sources, MLA, £ 50.95
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Abstract
This paper provides a background and overview of realism and naturalism, a comparison of Richard Wright's "Native Son" with Ann Petry's "The Street" from a naturalism perspective and others, followed by a summary of the research in the conclusion.

From the Paper
"Early on in her book, Petry describes her protagonist, Lutie Johnson, who contemplates with both "irony and indignation on the violations of privacy that segregation and its attendant overcrowding engender in 1940s Harlem" (Hicks, 2002, p. 89). According to a scene described by Petry, Lutie would "fill up all the cots--row after row of them. And when the tenants who had apartments came in late at night, they would have the added pleasure of checking up on the occupants. . . . And the tenants who had apartments would sit on the stairs just as though the hall were a theater and the performance about to start--they'd sit there waiting until Jackson came home to see what he'd do when he found Rinaldi tucked into the cot with his girl friend (Petry, 1947, pp. 7-8)."
Essay # 23801 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Native Son", 2002.
A character analysis of Bigger Thomas in Richard Wright's novel "Native Son", with a focus on the emotions of compassion which Wright creates for him.
1,308 words (approx. 5.2 pages), 2 sources, MLA, £ 22.95
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Abstract
In Richard Wright's "Native Son", the character of Bigger is at times both a victim and a sacrificial figure. The paper shows that the horrible events of his life are shaped by the hopelessness and racism of his environment. The paper examines how Wright manages to create a form of compassion for Bigger, a man whose life was largely predetermined by his environment. Eventually, Bigger realizes that a violent attack against white society was the only option available to him, in the overwhelming despair and hopelessness of the inner city.

From the Paper
"Wright is careful to craft the story so the events of Bigger's life seem almost out of Bigger's control. Bigger Thomas is trapped by the frustration and poverty of his life. Bigger grows up in a society of racism and hopelessness, and ultimately becomes a product of this environment. As Bigger looks back over the course of his life, he eventually decides that lashing out violently against white society was the only possibility that was open to him. Bigger's attorney clearly reflects this belief in his closing statement, where he notes of Bigger, "It was the first full act of his life; it was the most meaningful, exciting and stirring thing that had ever happened to him. He accepted it because it made him free, gave him the possibility of choice, of action, the opportunity to act and to feel that his actions carried weight" (Wright)."
Essay # 29077 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Native Son", 2002.
A review of the historical aspect of Richard Wright's novel "Native Son".
1,331 words (approx. 5.3 pages), 2 sources, MLA, £ 22.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses how Richard Wright's novel, "Native Son", is a slice of American history. It looks at how Wright makes several statements about the African-American experience through dynamic characters and situations. By employing the techniques of realistic details and connotative diction, it shows us how Wright successfully demonstrates what life might have been like for blacks in America, specifically in the city of Chicago, during the 1930s. It analyzes how it reveals the hopelessness of the inner city life as well as describing the plight of one man who becomes a victim of that kind of life. It shows how Wright exposes the fear, flight and fate of Bigger Thomas through racial tensions and an increased black consciousness and how through connotative diction and specific attention to detail, Wright is able to paint a picture of a young man who never really has an honest chance to compete or survive.

From the Paper
"As a result of the Depression, the government offered public assistance commonly referred to as "relief" to those in need. Native Son also illustrates the existence of the relief, through which Bigger found his job. Relief is not shown in a very positive light, as Bigger was not so thrilled about the job relief found for him. In fact, he confesses to jack that he "would rather go to jail than take that damn relief job" (Wright 32). This is further illustrated after Bigger gets the job and his family is curious about it and he would rather not talk about it at all. (98-99) Bigger's negative reaction toward the job and the system itself can be seen as another way the white man kept the black man down. By having some of the characters in Native Son view the relief program as a positive thing and Bigger see it as a negative thing, Wright is, however, injecting mixed feelings on the subject."
Essay # 9006 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Native Son": The Paradoxical Symbol, 2000.
This paper discusses and analyzes the symbols of light and dark in the novel "Native Son" by Richard Wright.
600 words (approx. 2.4 pages), 1 source, MLA, £ 10.95
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Abstract
The paper shows that the symbols of dark and light in Richard Wright's "Native Son" represent both good and bad elements in the book. It discusses how these motifs are hurtful and beneficial simultaneously throughout the novel. It shows, too, how these symbols refer to objects, feelings, people, culture and society.

From the Paper
"The light and dark motifs in the novel Native Son, by Richard Wright, are ambivalent and complex. These symbols have both good and bad elements. On the one hand, Bigger Thomas hates what whites have made of his dark skin; he is conditioned to see his blackness in a negative manner. However, he loves the darkness when it offers protection from what whites have caused in Bigger's home, community, and life. The light symbols in this novel represent a sense of power. The whites, in Native Son, are considered to be superior based on the light color of their skin. Light also represents a lack of knowledge of the whites about black society and culture."
Essay # 45758 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Max's Defense in "Native Son", 2002.
An analysis of Max's defense of Bigger Thomas in "Native Son" by Richard Wright.
1,397 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 4 sources, MLA, £ 23.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the book, "Native Son", by Richard Wright and, in particular, looks at how Boris Max uses his defense of Bigger Thomas to state his own beliefs, as a pulpit as it were. It analyzes how, knowing Bigger is guilty, his own desires and viewpoints come into play and, in effect, it shows how Bigger's trial is not so much about guilt or innocence, but what causes men to behave the way they do and whose responsibility their behavior ultimately becomes.

From the Paper
"Max uses blindness in his passionate argument to the judge, and this same blindness is a continuing theme throughout the book. Max eloquently tells the judge that if he reacts only to Max's comments about the sufferings of Negroes, he will be "blinded" by feelings that prevent him from understanding reality and acting accordingly. Max pleads, "Rather, I plead with you to see... an existence of men growing out of the soil prepared by the collective but blind will of a hundred million people" (Wright 328), and continues, "Your Honor, in our blindness we have so contrived and ordered the lives of men" (Wright 336). Thus, Max sees blindness in this instance is a threat to the state, along with a threat to men's freedom."
Essay # 2284 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Women in Richard Wright's "Native Son", 2000.
A look at the role of women, their character and how they are portrayed in Richard Wright's novel "Native Son".
1,970 words (approx. 7.9 pages), 5 sources, £ 32.95
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Abstract
A discussion of sexism and the role of women in "Native Son" by Richard Wright. The author investigates how they relate to the authority of the major male characters and to what extent they are portrayed in a negative light.

From the Paper
"In his most famous novel, Native Son, Richard Wright's female characters exist not as independent individuals, but only in relation to the male figures of authority that surround them--husbands, sons, fathers, boyfriends, and of course Bigger Thomas, the protagonist. In fact, the role of each woman that Wright presents to us is meaningless without a male counterpart; the women cannot function on their own. Their sole purpose in the novel is to further the story, to put Bigger in new and more dangerous situations by questioning or threatening his male authority. Each major woman character in the story represents through her personality and actions a different kind of threat to Bigger's masculine power. There is Bigger's mother, who offers him nothing in the way of motherly support, only constant nagging and insult. Next we have Mary Dalton, the idealistic and headstrong young white girl whose determination to connect with Bigger and make him feel her equal gets her killed. Her mother, Mrs. Dalton, is virtually her complete opposite: weak, frail, and helpless. Her one influence on the storyline is her indirect responsibility for her daughter's murder. And finally there is Bessie, Bigger's overworked, excitable, alcoholic girlfriend and second murder victim. In general she is not intelligent or strong enough to pose a real threat to his security, but when she questions Bigger's authority he is compelled to kill her. Each of these women is different, but in the end each plays the same part--the intimidator, the threat to Bigger and what he wants."
Essay # 56412 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Notes of a Native Son", 2004.
An analysis of James Baldwin's portrayal of the black experience in his selection of essays, "Notes of a Native Son".
1,208 words (approx. 4.8 pages), 0 sources, £ 21.95
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Abstract
This paper examines James Baldwin's book, "Notes of a Native Son", published in 1955, which is a collection of nine essays he had written on the state of what were then called "Negroes" in the United States. It looks at how, in his essays, he notes the interface between his personal life, the social atmosphere of the day, the political movements of the day, and even what was going on in entertainment. The result is essays that give a view of the Negro experience in the 1950s that is both broad and deep.

From the Paper
"In another essay he talks about the neighborhood press in the Harlem of the time. Harlem at that time was run-down, and he reports, rents there were higher than they were in other parts of Manhattan, something not generally true today. He complained that the Negro newspapers emulated White newspapers, focusing on prominent crimes committed by Blacks, or society gossip about the Harlem upper crust. He found fault with the Black magazine Ebony, which he said encouraged people to a sentimental kind of happiness that suggested they should assume things would get better. He wryly noted that if this were true, "Black" publications wouldn't be necessary and noted that the article was accompanied by a Black woman carrying a basket of onions from a field."
Essay # 89999 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Influence of Aristotle on 'Native Son', 2006.
This paper discusses the influence of Aristotle's 'Poetics' on Richard Wright's 'Native Son'.
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 2 sources, £ 45.95
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Abstract
In this essay, the writer examines similarities between Aristotle's 'Poetics' and 'Native Son' by Richard Wright. The writer notes that at the beginning the works do not seem to have much in common, but claims that some of the fundamental principles are shared. The writer points out that chiefly, the novel captures the lived experiences of real people and its plot-structure is animated by the fact that the past inform developments in the present and future.

From the Paper
At first glance, Richard Wright's Native Son does not appear to have a great deal in common with Aristotle's Poetics. The reason for this is that Wright's master-work is not "poetic" in the conventional sense but rather a novel detailing the anger and alienation of African-America in the first decades of the twentieth century. Be that as it may, Wright's novel does actually share some of the fundamental principles that Aristotle believes comprise the core of good literary, mimetic art.
Essay # 42273 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Native Son", 2002.
An analysis of the theme of fear in "Native Son" by Richard Wright.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 1 source, £ 18.95
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Abstract
This paper will discuss the idea of fear in the novel "Native Son" by Richard Wright. By examining the main character Bigger, we can learn how fear is the main subject of this story by showing examples to prove this motif.
Essay # 40431 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Native Son" - The Influences of Racism, 2002.
A review of Richard Wright's novel ""Native Son" on racism and white supremecy.
1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 6 sources, £ 22.95
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Abstract
This paper is an examination of Richard Wright's famous novel. The novel is filled with fierce and disturbing scenes where racism is pushed into the open, where the racially oppressed are understood in-relation to white supremacy.
Essay # 17330 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Richard Wright's "Native Son", 1977.
This paper analyzes the social and philosophical themes in Wright's "Native Son", a controversial work on the black experience in a white world.
3,600 words (approx. 14.4 pages), 1 source, £ 65.95
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From the Paper
The purpose of this research is to examine the literary qualities and the social and philosophical content of Richard Wright's "Native Son". Published in 1940, almost two decades before the civil rights movement, Richard Wright's Native Son was a literary and social bombshell. It was widely reviewed and discussed and catapulted its author into fame, making him a source of controversy for years to come. Wright's account of a shiftless, apparently apathetic slum boy who harbored an obsessive hatred of whites came as a shocking revelation even to the most liberal of white readers. Even more startling was the implication that the brutal murders committed by Bigger, the central character, in celebration of his hatred are the logical outcome of his degraded racial position in American society. In addition, woven throughout the story are the obsessive hatred of
Essay # 17332 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Richard Wright's " Native Son", 1977.
This paper discusses the character, Bigger Thomas, portrayed in "Native Son" by Richard Wright, as the existential hero and his alienation from society and from himself.
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 2 sources, £ 41.95
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From the Paper
This research paper is about the character, Bigger Thomas, portrayed in Native Son by Richard Wright, as the existential hero and his alienation from society and from himself.

The task of adjustment for Blacks in American society, particularly Black youths, is arduous, and made more difficult by the combined handicap of racial barriers and inferior social status. Personality deficiencies results and the behavioral patterns Blacks have learned in their own domestic and social environment are often inappropriate in greater American society, minimizing their chances for success - unless he is able to overcome the obstacles placed before him by a society which has a history of treating Blacks as inferior beings.

Native Son, a landmark in fiction, is the absorbing story of a "bad Negro" caught in the friction generated by his own ... "
Essay # 67017 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Native Son", 2006.
A discussion on and analysis of Richard Wright's "Native Son".
754 words (approx. 3.0 pages), 0 sources, £ 13.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses how Wright, through his use of character and story, shows that circumstances often evoke sympathy enough to transcend any contempt felt toward one's immoral behavior. The paper also explores social and racial problems presented in the novel--those of the contrasting lifestyles of Bigger and the Daltons, of black and whites.
In conclusion the author of the paper also offers his personal opinion of the novel.

From the Paper
"Such is the case with Bigger Thomas of Richard Wright's Native Son. As the title implies, Bigger is a native of a very distinct culture, the black product of a white society. To the superficial eye, he is merely the stereotypical black man of that time, full of violence, hatred, and indolence and lacking the proper moral direction that white society could provide. While much of these assumptions remain true throughout the novel, one begins to interpret them differently, as the hopeless situation into which Bigger has been born becomes increasingly apparent. Throughout Wright's accounts of Fear, Flight, and Fate, the truth of the environment in which Bigger lives evokes sympathy that shifts the responsibility for his actions from the protagonist to society."
Essay # 46647 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Native Son", 2003.
This paper discusses the character of Bigger in Richard Wright's novel, "Native Son".
1,583 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 0 sources, £ 26.95
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Abstract
A brief examination the horrifying story of a young African-American man, Bigger Thomas, living in the black area of Chicago. The tale examines the separation between the blacks and whites. It focuses on the trial section of the novel, in which the feelings of hatred are mostly present.

From the Paper
"The crimes he commits are small sins, but affect an entire society. Wright's uses his skillful writing to amplify the hateful emotion of racism against the blacks of those times. Those who have read the tale say that it has helped their knowledge of how the society works. It teaches one a lot about the extent to which racial discrimination can affect a person. The issues in the story are based on everyday circumstances. This is a book that teaches a lot about American countries history and human emotions. Its historical aspects focus on the racial discrimination that breeds hate, anger and fear in the victims."
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Papers [1-14] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 8]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 —>