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      • Richard Wright was an African American writer and poet who published his first short story at the age of 16. Later, he found employment with the Federal Writers' Project and received critical acclaim for Uncle Tom's Children, a collection of four stories. He is well-known for his 1940 bestseller Native Son and his 1945 autobiography, Black Boy.
      www.biography.com/authors-writers/richard-wright
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  2. Sep 3, 2024 · From the late 1930s through the 1950s—most notably in his novel Native Son (1940) and his autobiography, Black Boy (1945)—Wright was a dominant voice laying bare the discrimination and injustice that Black people were experiencing in the United States.

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  3. Richard Nathaniel Wright (September 4, 1908 – November 28, 1960) was an American author of novels, short stories, poems, and non-fiction. Much of his literature concerns racial themes, especially related to the plight of African Americans during the late 19th to mid 20th centuries suffering discrimination and violence.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Black_BoyBlack Boy - Wikipedia

    Richard Wright's Black Boy was written in 1943 and published two years later (1945) in the early years of his career. Wright wrote Black Boy as a response to the experiences he had growing up. [ 1 ] Given that Black Boy is partially autobiographical, many of the anecdotes stem from real experiences throughout Wright's childhood. [ 2 ]

    • Richard Nathaniel Wright
    • 1945
  5. Apr 2, 2014 · In 1945, Wright published Black Boy, which offered a moving account of his childhood and youth in the South. It also depicts extreme poverty and his accounts of racial violence against Black...

  6. May 7, 2021 · Wright’s protagonist is a Black man who is falsely accused of a double homicide and brutalized by the police before escaping into a sewer.

  7. Apr 14, 2021 · The Man Who Lived Underground,” a novel publishers rejected in the 1940s, is about an innocent Black man forced to confess to the murder of a white couple.

  8. He never graduated from high school. And from a very early age he was abused mentally and physically by racist employers. In his memoir, Black Boy, Wright described those early years as “dark and lonely as death,” causing him to reflect as follows about black life in America: