Analysis Of Sonny's Blues By James Baldwin

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The exploitation of slavery in the United States alienated an entire cultural class from society and created an immortal power struggle between two classes. It is through the short story “Sonny’s Blues” written in 1957 Harlem, New York that the author James Baldwin suggests that blacks are estranged from other social classes due to a lack of capital. . By making one of the main characters an outcast the author reveals the self-destructiveness and suppression of the black social class. The story culminates the experiences of two brother’s lives in early 1950’s Harlem. Baldwin depicts one brother named Sonny as a social outcast due to an addiction with heroin and a desire to be a jazz musician. Sonny’s brother is a high school algebra teacher …show more content…

By Baldwin out-casting Sonny he appears to be also othering black people as a race, reflecting white public mentality. Evidence of this was easity seen in publications prior to and during the 1950’s when white writters and photojournalist portrayed blacks in sterotype, suprefisiality, and caricature” (Weiner 161). Since After reading the paper on the subway Sonny’s brother says “Then perhaps I just stared at it, at the newsprint spelling out his name, spelling out the story” (Baldwin 122). It is through Sonny’s brother that Baldwin reveals the internal conflicts from their own social class when he says “He became real to me again”. (Baldwin1). This statement by the narrator suggest that their relationship had deteriorated to a point of estrangement. Due to the published media’s portrayal of black culture who focused on “images of black poverty and displacement” (Weiner 158) Baldwin speaks to the struggle of acceptance within the black social class. That struggle is to accept ones cultural values when they are at odds with another cultures beliefs. Baldwin again infers the social reality of the times when the author says, “I couldn’t believe it; but what I mean by that I couldn’t find any room for it anywhere inside me, I had kept it outside me for a long time. I hadn’t wanted to know” (Baldwin 123). This statement by Baldwin communicates a duel …show more content…

The narrator says, “They were filled with rage” (Baldwin 123) he then defines their rage in two equally reprehensible ways. One cause is “the darkness of their lives, which was now closing in on them” (Baldwin 123), the other cause “the darkness of the movies, which had blinded them to that other darkness, and which they now, vindictively, dreamed, at once more together than they were at any other time, and more alone” (Baldwin 23). The author appears to be referring to the darkness of cultural suppression and racism imposed by that other class. A big obstacle in obtaining cultural independence is financial stability that goes beyond personal wealth, but encompasses the social community as a whole. The wealth of the neighborhood businesses if not directed back into the community gives power to the class controlling the money. Leaving the inhabitants of Harlem like Sonny to watch as “Most of the houses in which we had grown up had vanished” (Baldwin 128). Replaced by housing projects that “jutted up out of them now like rocks in the middle of a boiling sea” (Baldwin 128). Hear Baldwin again reveals the controlling classes pushing its agenda to keep black people without hope or purpose. In 1950’s Harlem and all black communities nationwide during the 1950’s the controlling class belonged to the white majority who owned the

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