Notes of a Native Son
discussion
Notes of a Native Son - James Baldwin - reading Maya+Sofia 13 May 2016

I'm going to read the articles with my morning coffee :)
also, I saw that the book has quite a long foreword and bio. are we reading them first or in the end?

(view spoiler)
I read this before work as it will be late when I get a break today.

So, Hughes is praising Baldwin's work but suggests that he's a bit young i.e. naive?
The one in the Guardian is interesting too, explains why Leeming's book lacked personal information. But in general i agree with the law on this matter: the letters were not intended to be public so unless specifically approved by whoever owns the copyrights on them, they shouldn't be published. Sounded like the author of the article wasn't happy about that.

“The failure of the protest novel lies in its rejection of life, the human being, the denial of his beauty, dread, power, in its insistence that it is his categorization a..."
Powerful!
Yes, i've also highlighted what he said about labeling:
Our passion for categorization, life neatly fitted into pegs, has led to an unforeseen, paradoxical distress; confusion, a breakdown of meaning.
Did you get the feeling that JB suggests that Stowe or Wright had motives to write their books like that or it was ignorance on their side? I am not sure. Not that ignorance would be any better.
I understand what JB is saying about the 'bleaching' of black characters, about the hypocrisy of he white people feeling better just because they are reading and publishing such books. But i think his cry is most powerful when he writes how the black people grow to believe - because of such books - that they are sub-human. He fought against these in all his fiction works that we've read so far.

I understood that Stowe wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin to promote her cause - Abolition - however he says in using the stereotypes she ended up labelling, categorizing.
This becomes perfidious because the more they say it (even if the cause if right), the more it becomes the norm and so you (me) find myself doing it without even thinking about it because that's what we've been taught. For example here it is quite common to denigrate people coming from certain areas. And "Eventhough he comes from XYZ he is a quiet man." As if all the people of XYZ are automatically all trouble makers.
I still have to read the articles.

do you remember in After the Parade, Aaron had a student from Mogolia (? I think) and he described what his expectations of this student were. And then he thought: wait, why the hell do i have stereotypes of a Mongolian person in my head when i've never even met one, can't remember where i read/heard this information of the people in this country, etc.
I think we all absorb whatever info floats around us, more often than not we don't question it because we just don't have time to think about it/it's not important to us at this point. So without knowing we have thousands of preconceptions and false stereotypes in our heads.
And of course, as in the case JB writes about, these ideas are not so innocently made public, there's an agenda behind them.
As for Uncle Tom's Cabin - i've read it as a child. The only memory i have of it was when the white girl died (which i guess says more about me than the book) but i've been under the impression that the book is oriented to young audience.

Your point of perceptions floating around us makes what Michael (ah) believes about black music effecting those kids more pertinent. Especially so since in the second essay Baldwin says that "only in his music has the Negro in America been able to tell his story."
Many Thousands Gone
(view spoiler)

Maybe we'll find out if Michael's theory had any grounds. So far I am left with the impression that he really 'hears' the music. It does not serve as entertainment to him, I think it's the form of art that he relates to the most, it's his attempt to choose the soundtrack of his life - from the exuberant disco, through the house music to the punk and ska and alternative and whatever he's listening to during the different periods.


Out of curiosity I just skimmed a few negative reviews of Native Son here and it seems it's a required read for students in the US, and the readers loathe the main character, even call him a sociopath.

My take on that :
White Americans view Negro music with sentimentality which keeps the music safe from attacks [if they had viewed it otherwise, they may have understood it more and I guess they would not have allowed it to flourish]. This 'protection' enabled the music to go on and the story be told. I think you have to remove sentimentality to get to the truth.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amQn9...
as I had no idea of the movie or the opera it's based on.
it seems to me he's talking again about another art? piece that's failed to reflect the authenticity of the black people and has twisted them to fit to their ideas.


Eventhough he was talking about something I have not seen I still lije reading him.
Do you have time for another today?

I already had an idea of the Harlem Ghetto from the books we've already read. But here we have more.
I ask myself why if the prices are higher in Harlem do the negroes,live the..."
Re the high prices: I don't know for sure but I'm guessing their logic would have been that if they wanted to keep the majority of the black people in the ghetto, the high rent would prevent them for spending their limited money elsewhere and this way they close the entire cycle of the black people's lives in this ghetto. Also, probably relying than not many of them are educated enough to research prices in other areas they'd keep paying. It's pure separatism.
I think yes, JB was referring to himself when he talked about the unflattering portraits.
This is what I've highlighted about the press:
"It is the terrible dilemma of the Negro press that, having no other model, it models itself on the white press, attempting to emulate the same effortless, sophisticated tone—a tone its subject matter renders utterly unconvincing. It is simply impossible not to sing the blues, audibly or not, when the lives lived by Negroes are so inescapably harsh and stunted."
and about the Jew vs Negro:
Here the American white Gentile has two legends serving him at once: he has divided these minorities and he rules.

I remember this one from the biography - it's about David and the music band he played in trip to Atlanta.
(view spoiler)

It's pretty much the same now during political campaigns, including the buying of minorities' votes. We have the exact same situation here with the Romani who are only exploited during elections and then left in the same place they were before.
Same here - everybody is courted during the political fervour then everybody is forgotten.
Most interesting was that white woman and her perverse belief she was helping the cause when she just used it to farther establish her authority and privilege.
"Doing good" gives it's own kind of high - a person gets built up like that.

I loved how familiar it felt reading this because of the biography - the death of his father, the time in New Jersey and the incident in the restaurant, the funeral and the riot, etc. But most of all his words about the destructive force of hatred and the need of acceptance. I think it was absolutely the right decision for him to leave the country shortly after that. I can't imagine how he would've been able to keep his heart away from the hatred otherwise. Emotions usually are stronger than logic.
His analogy with the amputation and the gangrene was very good.

The amputation analogy reminded me of Michael and the pills

He seems to be suggesting that JB will be great when he shed's his 'blackness' am I right?
And how would that be JB being true to himself, being a witness and if he doesn't write about that what should he write about 'white' matters.

i don't think i'll have the time. going out for dinner after work and then i may read a bit from the other book.
We have 4 essays left. How about 2 tomorrow and 2 on wednesday?

He seems to be suggesting that JB will be great when he shed's his 'blackness' am I right?
And how would that be JB being true to himself, bei..."
the way I understood it LH suggested that JB still struggles with his identity and that's reflected in his work. But he's optimistic for JB's future work.

Happy dinner!"
thanks, I had good time.
Read two chapters from The Disappearance Boy this afternoon - the one on the rails and the one when he's 23 yo in London.
I'm intrigued, want to know more about Reggie.

For a boy whose job is to disappear Reggie does reel people in. Well he did reel me in. That gives scene really sets the stage. It's no wonder that Bartlett was knighted for his theatre work.

It seems i have a memory of pretty much everything in JB's biography because this text was very familiar.
(view spoiler)

Maya - if you want to do one today to get to your other book, it's ok with me.

It seems i have a memory of pretty much everything in JB's biography because this text was very familiar.
not a very interesting essay for me but i assum..."
I remember Leeming talking about it, the difference. That bit about how Europeans look at Americans touched a chord. I've noted the difference between my image of America from the media and the image I get from American friends here.

The place you come from and the past matter because they are part of what you are, denying them would be like denying yourself. Thus the running back or the fakeness. Roots matter. It is what also makes the difference between the black and the brown.
Going away help you see what you left behind. "From the vantage point of Europe he discovers his own country."

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