Abstract
While filmic readings of Native Son have long been a part of Richard Wright criticism, scholars have not yet fully considered way Wright s cinematic construction redefines his protagonist's subjectivity. Moreover, little has been written regarding subtle ways in which filmic tendencies inform Wright's technique in The Outsider. Wright relies on visual techniques and Hollywood studio tropes in creation of his male protagonists, accomplishing in prose what filmmakers accomplish in celluloid. In both texts, Wright anticipates power of to shape behavior, attitudes, and even sense of self. This narrative technique allows Wright to control way readers see his main characters and, by implication, how these characters see themselves. Reading novels in context of Wright's filmic understanding of power of observation and expectation allows us to move away from established interpretations focusing on castrating nature of Wright's female characters, and to foreground what I suggest is a more nuanced male sexuality in Native Son's Bigger Thomas and The Outsider's Cross Damon than has previously been considered. (1) I focus on filmic formulation of text itself that illuminates Wright's treatment of women; in both Native Son and The Outsider, Wright overtly constructs women's bodies in terms of gaze, and this pattern of filmic portrayal carries implications for all of Wright's characters, male and female, black and white. In both novels, Wright offers a complex interpretation of gaze in which desire and its role in identity, subjectivity, and agency compel his protagonists to action. The desires, and thus agency of Bigger and Damon are limited by a gaze that keeps them subjectified; panopticism of dominant culture situates them as objects, not agents; observed, not observers; passive, not active. I am interested in extending conversation regarding cinema and Wright's fiction in two ways. First, rather than merely examining film as a subject in Wright's fiction, I delineate ways in which Wright's representation of visual within these novels maps to specific cinematic techniques. Second, I wish to broaden discussion of Wright's use of film to include The Outsider, which has been treated almost singularly as a product of influence of French existentialism and Marxist politics. I argue that film is more important as a narrative technique than as a source of social commentary and control in Native Son: Wrights construction of gender and subjectivity is inextricably bound with cinematic notions of spectacle and desire. This interpretation complicates existing readings of Wright's treatment of gender; in particular, it complicates how we read Bigger's masculinity and his response to women. But this reading of Native Son is not merely an end in itself. It is also a means of interrogating writing strategy of The Outsider, in which explicit cinematic references may at first gloss seem inconsequential, a shadow of their presence in Native Son. However, if one continues to understand Wright's use of film as narrative technique rather than as narrative subject, and considers also Wright's well-documented experience with Hollywood in 1940s, filmic presence in The Outsider is as fundamental to text as it has long been considered such in Native Son. Wright's construction of Cross Damon, in particular way he imagines desire--both his own and others' for him--is an extension of cinematic style of Native Son. I will begin by examining film's influence on Wright's narrative technique in Native Son, unpacking writing strategies that are vital in offering a new reading of The Outsider. Cinematic spectacle, represented most notably in Native Son with Mary Dalton, and eventually, with Bigger himself, is replaced in The Outsider with Wright's notion of the outsider, which, while argued by both Cross Damon and his pursuer, Ely Houston, as being a mental state rather than a physical characteristic, is repeatedly marked through physical difference. …
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.