James Baldwin’s Sonny’s Blues

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In the world of Harlem, New York the cruelties of the world become incandescently prominent. James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues” addresses the foreboding power of pain in a world where someone’s coping skills dictate the course of their life. The story depicts a person’s options to ignore pain, create a reason for pain, or accept pain and live within it. Baldwin explains the theme of pervasive pain and parent’s attempt to shield children from it through the characters. Their reaction to pain constructs a motif of pain management.

For the sake of letting children stay innocent from the harsh treatments of the world for as long as possible, adults don’t speak of theses realities in the presence of children. Baldwin constructs a scenario in which adults try to shelter a child’s dark wisdom. “The darkness outside is what the old folks have been talking about. It’s what they have come from. It’s what they endure. The child knows that they won’t talk anymore because if he knows too much about what happened to them, he’ll know too much too soon, about what’s going to happen to him” (34). While justifiable to protect children from the cruelties of the world, to lead them on unaware of reality, the adults are committing a disservice to the children, who are oblivious to the challenges and trials ahead of them. Even though the adults do not bring the child’s attention to the challenges and trials are held in store, does not mean the cruelties can be ignored. Simply not talking about something does not make it disappear. As Baldwin crafts the scenario, he preludes to the inevitable: all things good eventually meet their end. In the case of the child, his early years in life can be havened from the malice of reality, but eventu...

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...he proves a viable point, but it is his older brother who represents wise insight. Through his different approach to dealing with suffering, the older brother, in a sense escapes extra suffering because he does not let himself believe his pain is unique. Like when his daughter Gracie dies, “[his] trouble made [Sonny’s] real” (42). Everyone is a victim to pain; it is a part of life.

Baldwin sends a message to readers about pain: no one is exempted from its presence. His short story conveys that a person’s management of that pain influences their existence. How they handle it can make living their life more of a struggle, more painful, or how they cope can make their life not necessarily comfortable, but livable; enduring pain is a pact with life.

Work Cited

Baldwin, James. “Sonny’s Blues.” The Art of The Short Story. New York: Pearson Longman, 2006.

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