Richard Wright 's "Bioethics Jim Claw" explains his cruel childhood lesson and explains how he survived and learned to survive through outstanding declines and discrimination in the country. In this article, the light talks about the lesson he learned about the right way to act around white people to ensure safety and avoid conflict. Caucasians think they are better than blacks and act to strengthen this idea. Their oppressive behavior creates social pressure and results, so that the blacks act in some way to avoid general lynching and strikes.
"Life Citizen Jim Crow" follows Richard Wright's experience of the Jim Crow era. This article began with the encounter with the first racial discrimination of the light when he was violent when he tried to play a war game with a white child, accusing the case with his mother's scolding. The remainder of this article will describe his experience as a black man in the south from adolescence to adulthood. In his first job I explained his racist experience. Her white colleague at the spectacle company tried to try to learn the skills to progress him more and more. Light article ends with a complicated view of the world view that blacks must adopt in order to survive during Jim Crow and questions "How do blacks see their way of life"?
Blackboy's uninterrupted question about economic, social and political inequality by Richard Wright provides insight into the living situation of Jim Crow South. Wright refused to quit asking questions to prove his personality, but the answer he found disturbed the cruel reality of inhuman treatment that African Americans suffered. I have known Richard Wright for a long time. When I was a teenager, I partially read "indigenous people", but I have never read any of his other works. I was taken to another book, "The American Kafir Boy" by Mark Matabane. In that book, he explained how Richard Wright's "Black Boy" had a great influence on him; so I decided to read "Black Boy"