Music of Survival: A Search for Identity in the Works of Richard Wright
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24113/ijellh.v9i8.11147Keywords:
Negro, Rootlessness, Anger, Alienation, Violence, Hostility, Poverty.Abstract
The complexly changing nature of American life and the vigorous versatility and all-encompassing spread of the written record are the marks of American literature. Social forces always make their imprint on literature. Especially in America where the democratic processes bring the people into immediate familiarity with and sensitive response to cultural forces, the literature has responded quickly to such pressures. African American literature consists of the literary work by the writers of Afro-origin settled in USA. The category“ slave narratives” were writings by people who had experienced slavery. It described their journeys to independence and their survival struggles. The concepts explored and issues raised were racism, slavery, and social equality.
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Wright Richard, Black Boy (1945), Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2008.
Wright Richard, Native Son (1940), Vintage Classics, 2000.
Wright Richard, The Outsider (1953), Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2008.
Wright Richard, Uncle Tom’s Children(1938), Blackstone Publications, 2020.
Moskowitz Milton, The Enduring Importance of Richard Wright; The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education. June 9, 2021.
Howe Irving, DISSENT (Autumn 1963), 1963.
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Copyright (c) 2021 Shadan Jafri

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