IJFANS International Journal of Food and Nutritional Sciences

ISSN PRINT 2319 1775 Online 2320-7876

SOCIAL IMPEDIMENTS: INDIVIDUAL AND SOCIETY IN RICHARD WRIGHT’S BLACK BOY

Main Article Content

J. Ashok Kumar, Dr. J. Mary Stella

Abstract

Individuals of color in the US have battled to execute racial equity among the citizenry, particularly after the announcement of their nation’s freedom. Numerous accomplishments have been made in numerous regions throughout recent many years; however, the issue of ethnic struggle has not been totally settled. The original showed blind enthusiasm in the South and its adverse consequences on society. The Various challenges in Wright’s day-to-day life are straightforwardly or by implication the aftereffect of racial separation. At the point when Wright enters the universe of work, he finds far and wide and horrendous racism in the public arena. Accordingly, the life account gets done with Wright’s trip toward the South and the prejudiced circumstances he faces there. The novel explores the issue of prejudice not similarly as a vile conviction held by underhanded people but as a precarious issue meshed into the very structure keeping the framework intact overall. Wright portrays characters, like Olin and Pease, as abhorrent people. The flow research endeavors to break down the amount of basic social issues like violence, racism, and mistreatment in the book. This study plans to draw attention to racism and persecution involving the individual experience of Richard Wright in his life account of Black Boy.

Article Details