Friday, August 2, 2019
Native Son - Segregation, Oppression and Hatred Essay -- Native Son Es
      Native Son - Segregation, Oppression and Hatred                 The novel, Native Son, portrays the struggle one black man faces while trying  to live in a segregated society in the late 1930s.  Growing up poor,  uneducated, and angry at the whole world, Bigger Thomas seems destined to meet a  bad fate.  Bigger lives with his family in a rat-infested one-bedroom  apartment on the South Side of Chicago, known as the "Black Belt."  His  childhood has been filled with hostility and oppression; anger, frustration, and  violence are a daily reality.  A the age of twenty, Bigger lands his first  real job as a chauffeur for a rich white man, Mr. Dalton.  On his first  night on the job Bigger takes Mr. Dalton's daughter, Mary Dalton, to secretly  meet her boyfriend, Jan Erlone, a self-admitted Communist.  Everyone gets a  little drunk, especially Mary, and after a while Bigger drops Jan off at home  and takes Mary home.  As he carries Mary up the stairs and puts her into  bed, Mary's blind mother walks in the room.  Bigger panics and accidentally  kills    Mary while trying to keep her quiet so Mrs. Dalton would not notice that  he was in the room, too.  When Mary's body is discovered people initially  blame Jan, but as evidence is discovered, the facts point to Bigger and he  flees.  He is soon caught and put on trial for murder.  Throughout  Bigger short life, he strives to find a place for himself in society, but he is  unable to see through the prejudice and suppression that he encounters in those  around him.  The bleak harshness of the racist, oppressive society that the  author, Richard Wright, presents the reader closes Bigger out as effectively as  if society had sh...              ... because they fear,  and they fear because they feel that the deepest feelings of their lives are  being assaulted and outraged.  And they do not know why; they are powerless  pawns in a blind play of social forces."  Despite Max's efforts, the  oppressors got their bitter vengeance and a jury of twelve white men sentenced  Bigger to death.  The segregation and oppression that exists between the  whites and blacks has created a feeling of hatred that has torn these two groups  apart, and succeeded only in perpetuating the tension and violence between  them.  Through Bigger's hatred and discomfort around whites, the naivety of  white society, and his violent murder of a young girl, Wright demonstrates the  intensity of the hatred created by the segregation and oppression that Bigger  was forced to endure every day until the end of his life.                            
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