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 19 - The Blues in Print
Wright’s “Blueprint for Negro Writing” Reconsidered
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
The 1937 manifesto “Blueprint for Negro Writing” is typically regarded as a programmatic articulation of the literary and aesthetic principles for the kind of socially engaged literature Richard Wright believed a modern Black writer ought to produce. This reading of the text assumes, however, an internally coherent argument that it does not entirely warrant. Indeed, I argue that the “Blueprint” is substantially haunted by a fear of alienation and isolation that tends to undermine its purportedly communalist politics. When read in the context of the vexed coterie politics of Dorothy West’s New Challenge magazine where it first appeared, as well as the edits and alternative draft notes in the archive, Wright’s attitude assumes a far more doubtful, and even vulnerable posture. This revised understanding of a key document in Wright’s oeuvre opens it—and by extension the early fiction as well—to new directions in Wright scholarship, especially those concerned with the intersection of race, affect, and alienation.
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- Richard Wright in Context , pp. 205 - 214Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021