Wednesday, May 6, 2020
Richard Wright and William Faulkner both examine the...
Richard Wright and William Faulkner both examine the psychologies of excluded members of society. While in Native Son, Wright studies someone oppressed and downtrodden beneath society, Faulkner looks at a family of outsiders cast far away from a common community in As I Lay Dying. For both, a central question becomes the function of their charactersââ¬â¢ minds in relation to one another, and to reality. Through different approaches, both Wright and Faulkner conduct modernist explorations of the social outcastââ¬â¢s interiority. To accomplish this, each authorââ¬â¢s narrative voice traverses the gradient from realism to experimental fragmentation, Wright constructing a vertical consciousness, articulate and omniscient regarding Biggerââ¬â¢s psychologicalâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦This gap between what Bigger understands about himself and what the narrative voice can comprehend creates dramatic irony, especially when Bigger is confronted with Jan and Maryââ¬â¢s inexp licably friendly behavior. Wrightââ¬â¢s descriptions of Jan and Mary make their good intentions clear to all but Bigger, and therefore sets up an unequal relationship between Bigger and the reader. He is now at the mercy not only of his own impulses, his employerââ¬â¢s wishes, and the law of white society, but also of Wright and his audience. The vertical consciousness that allows us to see so clearly what Bigger cannot, supports the deterministic trap that Wright has set for him. His environment has saddled him with unsatisfied urges, and now Wright has made him the victim of chance. In Maryââ¬â¢s claim that she wants to see how black people live in Chicago, Bigger experiences the ââ¬Å"deep sense of exclusionâ⬠that Wright describes in How Bigger Was Born (518). Then, in seeing Maryââ¬â¢s white robed mother at her bedroom door, he encounters the corresponding ââ¬Å"feeling of looking at things with a painful and unwarrantable nakedness,â⬠the understanding of his total vulnerability, which forces him to kill Mary (518). His fate is sealed. With this dramatic irony, produced by a kind of vertical consciousness, Wright has proven to what extent the black manââ¬â¢s agency, his interiority, is ââ¬Å"warpedâ⬠by external forces and placed in
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.