On March 1, 1940, Richard
Wright's (September 4, 1908 –
November 28, 1960) Native Son was released to critical
acclaim. Now, 80 years later it is still one of the most significant and
emotional tomes about the plight and pain of African American life in The United States.
Native Son has always drawn controversy. For some African Americans, it hit too close
to home; exposing the raw emotions felt from centuries of oppression, racism,
and discrimination they do not want to remember. For others, he voiced with
precision the pain and frustration that filled them with anger.
As a 'native daughter' of Chicago, Native Son
was required-reading in high school. Born in 1955, I grew up in
Bigger's Chicago, so his experiences and emotions hit close to the bone for me.
A historic marker in Natchez, Mississippi, commemorating Richard Wright, who was born near the City |
I entered high school in 1968, just months after the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. I entered high school a militant,
eventually sporting my Angela Davis natural, and shouting "Black
Power". I was excited when our reading lists included books such as
"Black Voices" and "Native Son".
Plaque commemorating Wright's residence in Paris, at 14, rue Monsieur le Prince. |
In Paris, his circle of friends
included French writers Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus. as
well as fellow expatriate writers Chester Himes and James
Baldwin. His relationship with Baldwin however,
ended after Baldwin published his essay "Everybody's Protest Novel" criticizing
Wright's portrayal of Bigger Thomas.
Wright became a French citizen
in 1947, Wright and lived the rest of his life in France. He died in Paris on November 28, 1960, the
age of 52 and was interred in Le Père Lachaise
While many books fade to
obscurity, Native Son continues to shed light on the lives of
Black folk and the oppression, racism, and discrimination we continue to
endure. With the improvements in race relations that have taken place, however,
Native Son still exposes the sorry treatment today of not just
African Americans but all people of color.
Powerful -
still. Relevant - still. Painful - still.