Sonny's Blues Thesis

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“Sonny’s Blues” by James Baldwin chronicles the relationship between two brothers who are both at various points in their lives. The story is narrated by Sonny’s brother who is never named. Although the story is focused on the events of Sonny’s life, readers also get an understanding of the brother’s reactions to Sonny’s actions along with the feelings. Baldwin arranges the story’s events to show a building of an understanding between the two of them where Sonny’s actions are the scope of the story and include the brother’s life as well. The short story opens up the readers to the Civil Rights Movement, taking place in the mid-20th century, where segregation was still an issue. The narrator and Sonny have grown up in a predominately black and very poor neighborhood in Harlem, New York. Although the Harlem Renaissance occurred more in the 1920s and 1930s, as opposed to the 1950s, the effects on the African American culture and the Harlem area were still prominent. The Great Depression and World War II played a huge role in the change of Harlem. Those who went into the war, specifically African Americans, returned home to the states with little credit or no respect. Harlem turned into a rundown and …show more content…

He also illustrates the darkness of the events, including the people and the town itself, along with the tragedies that occurred. According to John Clarborn, “[Sonny Blues] bops the reader over the head with billy clubs of proliferation tragedies: the uncle’s murder, the estranged brothers, Sonny’s arrest, the daughter’s sudden death by polio, the eternal resurgence of heroin addiction, and all the other tales submerged in the passing references to the background characters that populate the story’s Harlem scene” (90). Baldwin conveys the hardships of racism, drug and abuse, and impoverishment that occurred during the Harlem Renaissance, The Great Depression, and the Civil Rights

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