“How ‘Bigger’ Was Born,” by Richard Wright, 1940
This is an
obscure lecture on a work of proletarian literature written by Wright, a former
Communist Party member. It is about his most famous
book Native Son and its chief
protagonist Bigger Thomas. Native Son was recently redone and
modernized as a Netflix film, though
the film lacks the power of the original book and also changes the original
text. Native Son is the story of a dark-skinned 20-year old on Chicago’s Southside in
the 1930s. It was one of the first books
to lay out the effects of urban racism and poverty and their consequences on
darker-skinned people, especially boys.
This
lecture starts by explaining it will not deal with the psychological input the
author might have had on the book.
Wright says he modeled Bigger after four different kinds of kids he met
in the south – all misfits or rebels of one kind or another. 1., a bully, 2., a scammer who hated white
people, 3.,a thug and eventual criminal and 4., an unemployed man who hated Jim
Crow and was eventually institutionalized.
As Wright thought about it and worked with lighter-skinned writers, he
realized that the ‘Bigger’ type was not just limited to African-Americans but
included some European-Americans, Russians and even Lenin. All suffered from a certain kind of extreme
alienation from the societies they lived in and who felt apart from them.
Wright’s
chief fear was that his honest but negative portrayal of what institutional
racism does to young men might further confirm the ideas of the racists. Why not create an ‘uplifted Negro,’ the middle-class
‘blacks’ asked, the same question even his Communist Party comrades asked. Wright later left the CP after their attempts
to control his writing and failure to work against racism during WWII. (This story is revealed in a later book American Hunger where he is accused of
Trotskyism by the CP. Among other things, like breaking with 'socialist realism' as the only way to write he had become friends with C.L.R. James of the SWP.) As he humorously remarks, he had written an
earlier book called Uncle Tom’s Children that
“even banker’s daughters could weep over and feel good about.” He wasn’t going to do that again, so he
created Bigger, an anti-hero of sorts.
Wright
reveals that a rape case in Chicago
described in the Chicago Tribune formed
a template for much of the Bigger story. Rape in those days was an excuse for
the cops to round-up any vulnerable dark-skinned kid and rope him into the
crime, according to Wright. The ‘Biggers’ were their target. Unlike the South, Chicago was a monstrous
town that accelerated any rebellion like kindling on a low fire. Native
Son is set in urban Chicago
in all its crowded, crooked, classist glory, not in the South.
Richard Wright in plaid |
Wright
calls writing ‘significant living’ – a form of consciousness combining
politics, science, experience, memory and imagination. The first draft was done in 4 months, running
above 500 pages, starting with the second scene, as Wright dumped the
first. He used stream-of-consciousness,
interior monologue, a dream state, then matter-of-fact depictions in his
text. Wright thinks that all serious
fiction is “character-destiny” so Native
Son became Bigger’s story alone. Unlike
some of his contemporaries, Wright considered the story of African-Americans to
be horrible enough to fuel any amount of literature. Wright ends by saying “If Poe were alive, he
would not have to invent horror. Horror
would invent him.” And that horror is
racist capitalism.
The speech
is published in Early Works, a
compendium which includes Lawd Today!,
Uncle Tom’s Children and Native Son,
along with an excellent chronology of Wright’s difficult life. Wright grew up in a sharecropper family just east of Natchez, MS and moved frequently in the South, then to Chicago and New York He lived with relatives and worked at every dirty or odd job imaginable, eventually getting hired at the post office for awhile. In the process he discovered the New Masses, the CP's literature journal, after which he slowly became a full-time writer.
Other prior
reviews on anti-racism, Chicago or proletarian literature, use blog search box
upper left: “Black Radical,” “Living and
Dying on the Factory Floor,” “Are Prison’s Obsolete?” “Prison Strike,” “The New
Jim Crow,” “Slavery by Another Name,” and “The Bomb,” “The Rise and Fall of
the Dill Pickle Club,” and “Polar
Star,” ‘Red Baker,” “Factory Days,” “American Rust,” “Post Office,” “The
Football Factory.”
Thanks and
a tip of the black beret to Barry L.!
Red Frog
December 26,
2019
No comments:
Post a Comment