ISBN: HB: 9780300269321

Yale University Press

August 2024

192 pp.

21,6x13,8 cm

HB:
18.99 GBP
QTY:

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Bigger

A Literary Life

A biography of "Native Son's" Bigger Thomas that examines his continued relevance in debates over Black men and the violence of racism.

Bigger Thomas, the central figure in Richard Wright's novel "Native Son" (1940), eludes easy categorization. A violent and troubled character who rejects the rules of society, Bigger is both victim and perpetrator, damaged by racism and segregation on the South Side of Chicago. He steals, rapes, and kills without regrets. His story has electrified readers for more than eight decades, and it continues to galvanize debates around representation, respectability, social justice, and racism in American life.

In this book Trudier Harris, the distinguished scholar of English, examines the literary life of Bigger Thomas from his birth to the current day. Harris explores the debates between Black critics and Communist artists in the 1930s and 1940s over the "political novel", the censorship of "Native Son" by white publishers, and the work's initial reception – as well as interpretations from Black feminists and Black Power activists in the decades that followed, up to the novel's resonance with the Black Lives Matter movement today. Harris portrays Bigger as the knotted heart of American racism, damning and unsettling, and still very much with us.

About the author

Trudier Harris is J. Carlyle Sitterson Distinguished Professor of English, emerita, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and University Distinguished Research Professor of English, emerita, University of Alabama. She is the author of numerous books, including "From Mammies to Militants: Domestics in Black American Literature" and "The Scary Mason-Dixon Line: African American Writers and the South". She lives in Tuscaloosa, AL.