Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Wrights Native Son as Communist Manifesto? :: Native Son Essays
      Wright's Native Son as Communist Manifesto?                   Was Richard Wright's Native Son a  story about his views towards     Capitalism and Communism ? Did Richard Wright want to show the good and  bad     points towards Capitalism and Communism ? Or was this novel just about  how     a young man went through life and how society made him. Richard Wright's     Native Son shows that he used the Dalton's, Thomas's, and Jan Erlone to     represent Capitalism and Communism .                 After reading Richard Wright's Native Son,  many believe the author     purposely placed the Thomas family in a small, run-down home . The book     shows this right from the start . Bigger and his family had to sleep in  the     same room, and big rats were running around the house . This shows the     Thomas family represented the lower class, a trademark of Capitalism . I     could not even imagine living there, especially with that huge rat .The     house must have been very dirty and disgusting by today's standards . The     author wanted to show how some families live under these severe  conditions.     He made us see vividly how they lived with this quote . "A huge black rat     squealed and leaped at Bigger's trouser-leg and snagged it in his teeth,     hanging on." This showed how broke they were by showing that there were     giant rats living with them and how it had no fear of them .                 Richard Wright did not just not just want to  show the con sides to     Capitalism, he also wanted to prove the Capitalism has its good sides to  it     also . For instance, Richard Wright purposely placed the Daltons in a     spectacular house and made them very rich and famous . Another trademark  of     Capitalism, the upper class. The author showed how some of the Capitalist     folks lived . The upper class is very wealthy and basically gets what  they     want . Mr. and Mrs. Dalton had it made. They had chauffeurs, a huge  house,     and cars . They had too much money . They were giving away things to the     needy, though they were giving away useless things to the needy like  Ping-     Pong tables. Richard Wright wanted to show that the upper class were  afraid     of the blacks . Not afraid of their individual physical strength, but     					    
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