Book contents
- Richard Wright in Context
- Richard Wright in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Richard Wright’s Works: A Chronology
- Introduction Richard Wright’s Luck
- Part I Life and Career, Times and Places
- Part II Social and Cultural Contexts
- Part III Literary and Intellectual Contexts
- Chapter 17 Chicago Sociology
- Chapter 18 1930s Proletarian Fiction
- Chapter 19 The Blues in Print
- Chapter 20 Realism and Modernism, Solipsism and Solidarity
- Chapter 21 The Literary Mainstream: Story and the Book-of-the-Month Club
- Chapter 22 Wright, Psychoanalysis, and Fredric Wertham’s Reading of Hamlet
- Chapter 23 Wright’s Black Boy in Context
- Chapter 24 Wright and Women Authors
- Chapter 25 Existentialism
- Chapter 26 Wright and Les Temps Modernes
- Chapter 27 Wright and Postcolonial Thought
- Chapter 28 Modern Poetry and Haiku
- Part IV Reputation and Critical Reception
- Index
Chapter 26 - Wright and Les Temps Modernes
from Part III - Literary and Intellectual Contexts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 July 2021
- Richard Wright in Context
- Richard Wright in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Richard Wright’s Works: A Chronology
- Introduction Richard Wright’s Luck
- Part I Life and Career, Times and Places
- Part II Social and Cultural Contexts
- Part III Literary and Intellectual Contexts
- Chapter 17 Chicago Sociology
- Chapter 18 1930s Proletarian Fiction
- Chapter 19 The Blues in Print
- Chapter 20 Realism and Modernism, Solipsism and Solidarity
- Chapter 21 The Literary Mainstream: Story and the Book-of-the-Month Club
- Chapter 22 Wright, Psychoanalysis, and Fredric Wertham’s Reading of Hamlet
- Chapter 23 Wright’s Black Boy in Context
- Chapter 24 Wright and Women Authors
- Chapter 25 Existentialism
- Chapter 26 Wright and Les Temps Modernes
- Chapter 27 Wright and Postcolonial Thought
- Chapter 28 Modern Poetry and Haiku
- Part IV Reputation and Critical Reception
- Index
Summary
Wright’s connection to the postwar Parisian literary-intellectual journal Les Temps Modernes and collaborative friendship with Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir helped quickly establish him in France as, in Paul Gilroy’s words, “the first black writer to be put forward as a major figure in world literature.” This essay gives an overview of the various reasons that Wright was a good fit for the journal and its existentialist politics and the journal and its politics a good fit for Wright. But it also looks critically at a certain asymmetry to the relationship rooted in post-war Franco-American relations. It challenges the notion that Wright became a doctrinaire “existentialist” and suggests rather that he gained most from the journal and his friendship with Sartre the versatile, prophetic model of intellectual engagement already imminent in his autobiographical self-portrait. The connection influenced his novel The Outsider less than the non-fiction books of the 1950s.
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- Richard Wright in Context , pp. 273 - 282Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021