Native Son Essay In “Native Son’ Richard Wright uses setting and time to accommodate absoluteness by using his personal, background, anthesis, and understatements to begin the understanding of his protagonist, Bigger. The time period takes place in Chicago, Illinois in the 1930’s. There are three main settings used in the novel. Biggers’ one room apartment in the south side of Chicago that he shared with his two younger siblings and single mother, The Dalton home where Bigger realizes how poor his is, and the Cook County jail. The story takes place in the 1930’s in the south side of Chicago, Illinois. During this time it was still legal to have racial segregation, which caused all minorities to have very little opportunity. The white society did all in their power to keep conditions the same, but not all white people were rich like the Daltons that Bigger thought. This story takes place during the 1930’s during the Great Depression that lasted from 1929-1939. It was the longest lasting economic downfall in American history. It happened after the stock market crash in October 1929. It left millions of investors unemployed and poor, but it began to turn …show more content…
1908-28 Nov. 1960), author, was born Richard Nathaniel Wright on Rucker’s Plantation, between Roxie and Natchez, Mississippi, the son of Nathaniel Wright, an illiterate sharecropper, and Ella Wilson, a schoolteacher. When Wright was five, father left the family and his mother was forced to take domestic jobs away from the house.” “…graduating from the ninth grade at Smith Robertson Junior High School in Jackson as class valedictorian in June 1925…” “…After grade school Wright attended Lanier High School but dropped out after a few weeks to work; he took a series of odd jobs to save enough money to leave for Memphis, which he did at the age of seventeen.” “…in 1932, he became involved in the John Reed Club, and intellectual arm of the Communist party, which he joined the next