![]() All the characters are lonely, and struggle in vain for some kind of love relationship which can give their lives purpose and meaning. Yet if Baldwin’s feelings about white people are at all representative of the attitudes of large numbers of Negroes, and there is no reason to doubt this, then the white liberals and radicals had better get the message, and fast.Īnother Country explores with honest, unsentimental (to put it mildly) penetration various human relationships. “The message” in James Baldwin’s two latest books, a novel and a collection of essays, is one which many readers, in particular white liberals, but by no means excluding white radicals, do not want to get. Nobody Knows My Name More Notes of a Native SonĪlmost every writer must wonder, at one time or another, whether his readers “get the message” he is trying to put across. Transcribed & marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for ETOL. International Socialist Review, Fall 1962įrom International Socialist Review, Vol.23 No.4, Fall 1962, pp.122-123. ![]() Martha Curti: A Bitter Message (Fall 1962)Įncyclopedia of Trotskyism | Marxists’ Internet Archive ![]()
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