Sunday, March 24, 2019

Reviews of Native Son :: Native Son Essays

Reviews of aboriginal Son         Native Son, by Richard Wright, was hailed by reviewers as an present turn classic upon its release in 1940.  The impertinent was an instant bestseller, having been included in the book-of-the-month-club.  Due to its proto revolutionary themes it was the subject of some(prenominal) reviews.  Two such reviewers are Clifton Fadiman and Malcolm Cowley.         Clifton Fadiman, source for  The New Yorker declared that Native Son was the most powerful American novel since the Grapes of Wrath.  He is positivist that anyone who reads this book has to know what it means to be a Negro,  especially creation a Negro in the U.S. over seventy years later on the Emancipation Proclamation.  Fadiman then goes on to compare the novel to Theodore Dreisers An American Tragedy, declaring that his novel did for the American white as Native Son did for the Negro.    &nb sp    Fadiman begins criticizing Bigger Thomas, the briny character in the novel.  He feels that Bigger is just a goosey fool, having done everything possible to actually get himself caught.  Fadiman also writes that Bigger ...knew that the moment he allowed what his life meant to enter fully into his consciousness, he would either decimate himself or somebody else.  Fadiman then goes on by criticizing Wright stating that he is too explicit, repetitive, and overdoes his melodrama from time to time.  Fadiman does not believe Wright to be a finished writer just yet.  However, he does think that Wright possesses the two absolute necessities of the first-rate novelist, mania and in narrateigence. He also understands that Wright must have been greatly affected by the labor movement, which may have contributed to Native Son.         At the conclusion of his review, Fadiman at one time again compares Native Son to An A merican Tragedy.  He says that the two novels tell almost the same reputation. Although He feels that Dreisers novel is filled with better, more controlled fellowship he feels that Wrights novel will have the same affect on the reader if they are not afraid of a challenge.  By truism afraid, Fadiman means that Native Son is not merely a story but a deep experience.         The next review that we will whole tone at is one done by Malcolm Cowley,

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