Reflecting on the son of the born son, Light uses the naturalist ideology and image to create Thomas' character, but he is not a rational thought of the soul, it consists of many destructive emotions It seems that it is being done. This concept brings the possibility that racial discrimination is not the only message of this novel and perhaps everyone will feel loneliness and loneliness, he is trapped in a vicious circle of violence and oppression There. Larger efforts to find a place for himself, the blindness and naturalistic society he encountered in the surrounding people was harsh and harsh, and Wright introduced the readers to him as a result .
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 title of the novel "Traditional Song" will soon make the reader think about the concept of "localism" and "territory". Bigger killed the mouse in their apartment until the Bigger was executed at the end of the novel after the novel was opened and the status of Bigger's 'Aboriginal' is closely related to the lack of political rights It was related. Bigger was born in Mississippi, not Chicago, and the idea of "native son" is more true of Bigger's status as an American than his status as native of Chicago. In the whole novel, Richard Wright continues to emphasize that Bigger is not good in Mississippi and Harlem. Bigger was born in America as 'American born son', but more importantly, he became a product of Native American and the poor black community. This novel continues to show the feeling that the Bigger is trapped and the lack of personal and physical freedom. Basically the big Thomas is "the product of his environment"