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James Baldwin's 'Notes Of A Native Son'

Decent Essays

“Notes of a Native Son”

Questions for Discussion in Writing #3:
In James Baldwin’s story “Notes of a Native Son”, attributes Wright’s father with several reasons to his level of bitterness. For example, he was in the first generation of free men in America, and died in a period were equality still did not exist. His race was a big factor to his bitterness. The disease that killed him was TB and it is more common in the black community. Baldwin writes, “It was almost always my mother who dealt with them, for my father’s temper, which was at the mercy of his pride, was never to be trusted. It was clear that he felt their very presence in his home to be a violation: this was conveyed by his carriage, almost ludicrously stiff, and by his voice, harsh and vindictively polite.” By that, Baldwin meant Wright’s father thought that white people could not be trusted because of what he had gone through in the past. The way white people treated him planted a seed within him. Baldwin even wrote that the father’s legacy was, “nothing is ever escaped,” and the realization meant that the father would never be able to treat everybody equally. …show more content…

He used the two terms, “gangrene” and “amputation” to describe the different ways they can deal with living with bigotry and discrimination. Baldwin uses amputation to describe the way African Americans try to cut ties off with white culture and its society because they are not accepted. Gangrene may symbolize the way African Americans withstand the painful discrimination in their country because they have hopes that one day they will be allowed to be

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