Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Wright, Richard - Janice Thaddeus (essay date May 1985)
Wright, Richard - Janice Thaddeus (essay date May 1985)
Janice Thaddeus (essay date May 1985)
SOURCE: Thaddeus, Janice. “The Metamorphosis of Richard Wright's Black Boy.” American Literature 57, no. 2 (May 1985): 199-214.
[In the following essay, Thaddeus chronicles the publishing history of Black Boy and traces the book's metamorphosis from an open autobiography to a closed one.]
There are two kinds of autobiography—defined and open. In a defined autobiography, the writer presents his life as a finished product. He is likely to have reached a plateau, a moment of resolution which allows him to recollect emotion in tranquility. This feeling enables him to create a firm setting for his reliable self, to see this self in relief against society or history. Frederick Douglass's Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, for instance, is a defined autobiography, a public document, moving undeviatingly from self-denial to self-discovery. It rests on the fulcrum of:...
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Criticism
- Janice Thaddeus (essay date May 1985)
- James A. Miller (essay date summer 1986)
- Yoshinobu Hakutani (essay date autumn 1986)
- Joyce Ann Joyce (essay date 1986)
- James Robert Saunders (essay date winter 1987)
- Susan Neal Mayberry (essay date January 1989)
- Bruce Dick (essay date fall 1989)
- Trudier Harris (essay date 1990)
- James W. Tuttleton (essay date 1992)
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- Jeffrey J. Folks (essay date November 1994)
- Yoshinobu Hakutani (essay date 1996)
- Desmond Harding (essay date March 1997)
- Stephen K. George (essay date fall 1997)
- Timothy P. Caron (essay date 2000)
- James Smethurst (essay date spring 2001)
- Dennis F. Evans (essay date 2001)
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