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The Critical Response to Richard Wright: Critical Responses in Arts and Letters

Autor Robert J. Butler
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 mar 1995 – vârsta până la 17 ani
Richard Wright is widely recognized as one of the most important African-American writers and as a significant 20th-century author. With the publication of Native Son in 1940, Wright established his enduring reputation as a man of letters. With the immense critical success of Native Son, Wright went on to author Black Boy, The Outsider, and Eight Men. His writings reflect his experiences growing up in the poverty and racial strife of the South, and his thoughts on major social issues.This volume traces the critical reception of Wright's major works, from the publication of Native Son to the present day. An introductory chapter overviews the critical response to his writings, while two biographical chapters discuss his writings in relation to his life. Sections are then devoted to Native Son, Black Boy, and The Outsider. Each of these sections presents reviews and articles reflecting the best criticism of Wright's works. A final section, Richard Wright Today, offers contemporary assessments of Wright's reputation, as well as fascinating discussions of the recent Library of America editions of his works.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780313288609
ISBN-10: 0313288607
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Greenwood
Seria Critical Responses in Arts and Letters

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

ROBERT J. BUTLER is Professor of English at Canisius College, where he is also Director of College Honors. He has published numerous articles on African-American literature and contemporary American authors.

Cuprins

Series Forward by Cameron NorthouseChronologyIntroductionBibliographical OverviewRichard Wright: Black Boy from America's Black Belt and Urban Ghettos by Blyden JacksonNative Son: The Personal, Social, and Political Background by Keneth KinnamonNative Son 1940Review of Native Son by Henry Seidel CanbyReview of Native Son by Charles PooreUneven Effect by Howard Mumford JonesA Powerful Novel About a Boy from Chicago's Black Belt by Margaret WallaceReview of Native Son by Samuel SillenWright's Invisible Native Son by Donald B. GibsonRichard Wright's Women Characters and Inequality by Sylvia KeadyWright's Native Son and Two Novels by Zola: A Comparative Study by Robert ButlerBlack Boy 1945Review of Black Boy by Orville PrescottBlack Hunger by Charles LeeRichard Wright Looks Back by W.E. Burghardt Du BoisRichard Wright Adds a Chapter to Our Bitter ChronicleCreation of the Self in Richard Wright's Black Boy by Yoshinobu HakutaniSociology of an Existence: Richard Wright and the Chicago School by Carla CappettiIntroduction to HarperPerennial Edition of Black Boy (American Hunger) by Jerry W. Ward, Jr.The Outsider 1953Review of The Outsider by Orville PrescottReview of The Outsider by Arna BontempsReview of The Outsider by Lorraine HansberryRichard Wright and the French Existentialists by Michel FabreRichard Wright's The Outsider: Existentialist Exemplar or Critique? by Amritijit SinghEight Men 1961Lives of More than Quiet Desperation by Richard SullivanReview of Eight Men by Saunders ReddingRichard Wright: A Word of Farewell by Irving HoweThe Paradoxical Structure of Richard Wright's "The Man Who Lived Underground" by Patricia D. WatkinsThematic and Formal Unity of Richard Wright's Eight Men by Robert ButlerRichard Wright TodayToo Honest for His Own Time by Arnold RampersadThe Problematic Texts of Richard Wright by James W. TuttletonThe Library of America Edition of Native Son by Keneth KinnamonThe Library of American Edition of The Outsider by Yoshinobu HakutaniAuthority, Gender, and Fiction by Eugene E. MillerThe Invisible Woman in Wright's Rite of Passage by Robert ButlerSelected BibliographyIndex