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Richard Wright, American Hunger, and the Communist Party
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Richard Wright's flirtation with the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) was not based
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on idealism, strong beliefs, or rational judgment, but rather on Wright's need
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to take off his mask and share his intelligence with the world. We see no
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evidence that Wright looked to Communism because of its ideals. Instead,
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Wright made his political foray because of his yearning to break out of his
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shell and reveal his real self to others.
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Richard Wright lived most of his life through a mask. Rarely letting down his
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guard:
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The essence of the irony of the plight of the Negro in America, to me, is that
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he is doomed to live in isolation...[1] (p. 14)
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Though I had fled the pressure of the South, my outward conduct had not
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changed. I had been schooled to present an unalteringly smiling face and
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I continued to do so despite the fact that my environment allowed more open
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expression. I hid my feelings and avoided all relationships with whites that
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might cause me to reveal them.[1] (p. 14-15)
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Here we see that Wright felt that he is trapped behind his mask and could not
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express his feelings. Unlike some, Wright actually did have strong emotions
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as we learn earlier: "All my life I had done nothing but feel and cultivate
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my feelings [1]" (p. 13). Even though Wright was now in the North, he could
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not even engage in an intelligent conversation with anyone besides himself
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because of a combination of societal pressures and his own inner anxieties.
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Bradley [3] concurs:
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These observations seems to reflect more than they illuminate; to me they
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reveal a man horribly crippled, uneasy with emotion, unaccustomed to warmth.
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The causes of that crippling are not totally clear. (p. 70)
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The illness that Wright suffered was not one with an easy cure. Though the
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symptoms were apparent enough for even Wright to notice, Bradley [3] points
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out that the causes were not clear. Societal pressures, like the underlying
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racism in Chicago, may have been a large factor. In Chicago, in the 1920's
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and 1930's, if you were black and you were lucky, maybe you would have the
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opportunity to become a mailman. If you were black, you could not dream.
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You could not even dream of becoming a professional baseball player. Even
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today, Jesse Jackson has said that Chicago is the most racist city in
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America.
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Wright was confused and unable to understand his inner emotions. Withdrawn,
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Wright longed to open up to someone, but he did not have that someone.
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I still had no friends, casual or intimate, and felt the need for none. I had
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developed a self sufficiency that kept me distant from others, emotionally
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and psychologically...Emotionally, I was withdrawn from the objective world;
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my desires floated loosely within the walls of my consciousness, contained
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and controlled.
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...Even though I reacted deeply, my true feelings raced along underground,
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hidden.[1] (p. 20)
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Wright claimed that he had no need for friends but we know he only lied to
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himself. People as intelligent as Richard Wright need an outlet for
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conversation and others to stimulate their minds. Wright contradicts
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himself less than a page later:
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I did not act in this fashion deliberately; I did not prefer this kind
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of relationship with people. I wanted a life in which there was a constant
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oneness of feeling with others, in which the basic emotions of life were
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shared...But I knew that no such thing was possible in my environment.[1]
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(p. 20-21) [italics mine]
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Wright did not just want "a life in which there was a constant oneness of
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feelings with others," he needed such a life. He had a strong need for
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other people and for a sense of belonging even though he initially acted
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in the opposite fashion. To live this life, Wright had to believe in
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something larger than himself. Wright had to associate himself with a
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higher being. Because he had already discounted God and religion, Wright
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gravitated toward the Communist party.
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Wright joined the Party not because he admired socialism, but because he
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needed people and because it was a vehicle for him to cultivate his writing.
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Through the John Reed Club, Wright was able to show the world, or at least
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other people associated with the Communist Party USA, his intellect and
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insight.
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Not only did Wright not believe in Communism, but he made little effort to
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learn what the Party really stood for. Wright had no trouble studying
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Dostoevski or Sociology to cultivate his writings, but he could not find
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the time to read Marx or Moore or even to pick up a newspaper or an
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encyclopedia and learn about Trotsky.
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... I stammered, trying not to reveal my ignorance of politics, for I had
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not followed the details of Trotsky's fight against the Communist party
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of the Soviet Union ...[1] (p. 81)
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McCall [5] points out that Wright had little in common with the Communist
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party:
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Doctrinal differences don't matter; ideas themselves scarcely matter; all
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that counts is the blessed new feeling of belonging [5] (p. 363)
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What did Wright believe? What were his political views? Did he even agree
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with socialism? American Hunger does not make any attempt to answer these
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questions. Wright believed in the individual rather than the collective
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body, an idea foreign to most members of the Communist party in those days.
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The Communists were not looking to cultivate free thinkers - people who
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they felt belonged to the bourgeoisie. Wright believed that one could not
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be free until one could freely think. CPUSA was looking for men and women
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of action, they were looking for soldiers. Wright was a man of action, but
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he was not a soldier. A soldier shoots without asking "why?" A true member
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of the Communist Party did not read books, a real member worked in the
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factory by day and led protest marches by night. The Communists had two
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basic essentials: food and shelter. Wright needed something else - he
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needed books.
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The Party demanded that Wright subordinate his artistic goals for their
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needs. Members attacked Wright's intellect as no good for their cause,
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a cause that Wright either did not believe in or did not fully understand.
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But Wright made a conscious, calculated, and rational decision to join the
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Communist party. Wright used the Party as an umbilical cord to nurse his
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writing and nurture his soul. Wright wanted to use CPUSA to make friends
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and reveal his thoughts. Wright, however, had no intention of being used
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by the Communist party - especially by those who did not appreciate his
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talents. American Hunger reveals that Wright was mistrusted because he
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was deemed an "intellectual." At one point Wright attends his first
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Communist unit meeting and his serious report is followed by laughter
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by the rank and file of those in attendance:
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During the following days I had learned through some discreet questioning
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that I had seemed a fantastic element to the black Communists. I was
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shocked to hear that I, who had been only to grammar school, had been
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classified as an intellectual. What was an intellectual? I had never
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heard the word used in the sense in which it was applied to me. I had
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thought that they might refuse me on the grounds that I was not
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politically advanced; I had thought they might place me on probation;
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I had thought they might say I would have to be investigated. But they
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had simply laughed.[1] (p. 77)
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The John Reed Club filled a large void which allowed Wright's writing to
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feel and flourish. The Club was why Wright had associated himself with
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CPUSA in the first place - it was a forum for thoughtful discussion and
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it provided outlets for writers to publish their work. Wright's Communist
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foray was all but over after the Communists decided to eliminate the John
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Reed Club in the New York Conference:
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Debate started and I rose and explained what clubs had meant to young writers
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and begged for their continuance. I sat down amid silence. Debate was closed.
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The vote was called. The room filled with uplifting hands to dissolve. Then
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came the call for those who disagreed and my hand went up alone.[1] (p. 98)
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Wright used the Communist party as a tool to dislodge the mask he had worn
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for so long. Initially, CPUSA liberated him and enabled Wright to express
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his feelings. However, it soon became apparent that the Party wanted to go
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further and replace Wright's old mask with a new mask of their creation.
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They sought to apply a filter to his mind which would sift through Wright's
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thoughts and only allow him to express such feelings that were in line with
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Communist mentality. Leibowitz [4] agrees:
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Any authority that usurps his liberty and brushes aside his feelings is
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intolerable to Wright4 [ ](p. 351)
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Wright had come too far to be pressured to give up his individuality. And
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his sense of himself, which initially attracted him to the Party, is what
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led to his Communist demise. Ironically, Wright ultimately left the Party
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for the same reason he joined it - to reach his artistic goals.
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An invisible wall was building slowly between me and the people with whom
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I had cast my lot. Well, I would show them that all men who wrote books
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were not their enemies. I would communicate the meaning of their lives
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to people whom they could not reach; then, surely, my intentions would
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merit their confidence... I had to win the confidence of people who had
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been mislead so often that they were afraid of anybody who differed from
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themselves. Yet deep down I feared their militant ignorance.[1] (p. 78)
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Leibowitz [4] remarks:
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That the Communists did not respect individuality wounded Wright in his
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secret spot: his ambition to be a writer.[4] (p. 349)
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Wright probably would have never become a great writer if not for his foray
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into Communism. The John Reed Club, the intelligent discussions, and even
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his experience with petty politics gave him the tools, the vision, and the
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confidence to write. Wright's entire life was destroyed by the Communist
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party in a way, however. During the Red Scare, he chose to leave the
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country rather than testify against those people who had oppressed him.
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Wright's exodus from the United States ultimately lead to his life's
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decline,
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The Communist party has been a mainstay with many of the great African-
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American writers. As recent as the 1980's, Angela Davis was an active
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Communist. Davis, a great writer, ran for Vice President under the
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CPUSA ticket both in 1980 and in 1984. However, even Davis' involvement
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became tragic. Gus Hall, the Communist party boss, purged her from the
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party in 1991 after she complained about racial quotas.[6]
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As for Wright, he wrote half a book in the prime of his life about his
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experience with Communism. His political experiences and traumas left a
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profound mark on his conscious. It is as though he thought he found
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himself only to realize that his search was far from over:
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Humbly now, with no vaulting dream of achieving a vast unity, I wanted
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to try to build a bridge of words between me and the world outside,
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that world which seemed so distant and elusive that it seemed unreal.[1]
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(p. 135)
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Appendix - Bibliography
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1. Wright, Richard. American Hunger. San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1977.
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2. Reilly, John M. (p. 213-227). Critical Essays on Richard Wright. Edited
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by Yoshinobu Hakutani. Boston: G.K. Hall & Co., 1982.
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3. Bradley, David. "American Hunger (1977)," (p. 69-71). Richard Wright -
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Critical Perspectives Past and Present. Edited by Henry Louis Gates Jr.
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and K.A. Appiah. New York: Amistad, 1993
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4. Leibowitz, Herbert. " Arise, Ye Pris'ners of Starvation': Richard
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Wright's Black Boy and American Hunger," (p. 328-358). Richard Wright -
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Critical Perspectives Past and Present. Edited by Henry Louis Gates Jr.
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and K.A. Appiah. New York: Amistad, 1993
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5. McCall, Dan. "Wright's American Hunger," (p. 359-368). Richard Wright -
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Critical Perspectives Past and Present. Edited by Henry Louis Gates Jr.
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and K.A. Appiah. New York: Amistad, 1993
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6. "California Honors Communist." Campus Fall 1995, Volume 7: 10-11
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