Among the novel "Son of the Earth", writer Richard Wright is exploring racial discrimination and oppression in American society. Writers skillfully incorporate his narrative voice into Bigger Thomas so that the reader can feel how stress and racial discrimination affects the feelings, thinking, self-image, and life of the black people . The tragic product of American imperialism and exploitation in the modern world is great. One of the greatest signs of the greatest tragedy of mankind is that a great deal of oppression is oppressed, penetrating every aspect of the life of oppressed people, creating a world of misunderstanding, ignorance, suffering.
The born son of Richard Wright, the novel by Richard Wright, the child 's inborn stunned the feelings of black and white Americans and caused a real controversy. The hero's Bigger Thomas comes from the lowest level of society, and the light does not combine the romantic elements he shares with literary heroes. Because of the social conditions he lives, people expect him to get bigger: he is unhappy, afraid, violent, hateful, and indignant. - In the history of Oregon, hundreds of thousands of people live, including dozens of native American tribes dating back to 9500 BC. As the tribe passed the Bering Strait, many chose to settle in the northwest. In the first region of the state of Oregon, there were people of the Karap family who lived in Oregon more than 8000 years ago, but Karapua is just one example of the state of Oregon.
The main character and hero of the child born by is Begger Thomas. He is the focus of the novel and is the realization of his main idea - the influence of racial discrimination on the mental state of the black victims. By exploring Ginger's psychological corruption Richard Wright can see the influence of racism on Black Americans in the 1930s. Several people who criticized his son questioned the effectiveness of Bigger as a role. For example, the famous black writer James Baldwin thinks Beagle is too narrow to represent the full range of black American experience, but I think he is a powerful and alarming symbol of the black anger. As a 20 - year - old black man and his family in an apartment in the southern part of Chicago, Bigger is living a life defined by his fear and anger against white people. After leaving the eighth grade school and conducting racist real estate behavior, he was forced into poverty and hence more
Native Son (1940) promoted Richard Wright's career and made him one of the best writers in the United States. His protagonist Bigger Thomas is a young black man living in the poor in southern Chicago. When a wealthy white family member offered him a personal driver's job, Bigger already seemed to have acquired tickets for terrible conditions, but the fate of Bigger replaced it. When I read this book for the first time, I criticized it even more. He is incredibly grateful, and it is difficult to eradicate even his best situation. After all, this is the point - bigger one should not move, it can be used as a lens to observe the machine that created him. I admire that Wright tried to make a totally unpleasant hero. It raises a question: should we see the system by people withstood it or just as the system itself (housing, law, society, everything?