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English

EFFECT OF JAMES BALDWIN’S BIOGRAPHICAL STORY TO THE SHORT STORY ʺSONNY BLUESʺ

James Baldwin is renown American novelist, essayist, playwright, and the vice behind the American Civil Rights Movement who wrote a collection of essays titled ʺNotes of A Native sonʺ, ʺThe Fire Next Timeʺ, and ʺNobody Knows My Nameʺ among others. His compositions explore sexual, racial and classical differences in the A Western world especially America in the 20th century. (Baldwin 67)

In 1924, James was born in New York City and lived in France until when he met his death in Saint-Paul de Vance on 1st December 1987. The novel is ʺGo tell it On the Mountainʺ which recognized his insights on spirituality, race, and humanity (Baldwin 83) is among his most recognized literary works.

In an equally famous story, Sonny Blues, James Baldwin narrates what seems to be a reflection of his lifestyle. This is evident in the theme, setting, characters of the story and more, the fact that it is written in the first person narrative.

There are definite times in Sonny’s Blues where the lives of both the narrator and Sonny correspond with that of James Baldwin. The setting of the story is from James’ childhood. Moreover the fact that the narrator chooses not to mention his names anywhere and while the other characters are known by their familial positions shows Baldwin’s feelings regarding his place in his family. He was the oldest and the only child who didn’t share biological parents in the family. Hence he writes, ʺone writes out of one thing only-ones experienceʺ (Baldwin, 42)

The story is set in Harlem; New York during the 1950s. It talks about a neighborhood that is predominantly African American, troubled with racism, poverty-stricken and full of violence. Since James was born and raised in Harlem, he was no stranger to the vices of that society hence the story ʺSonny’s Bluesʺ. The story explores childhood, drugs, prostitution, jazz music, church, family, school, prison among others.

In Sonny’s blues, Sonny doesn’t come to school because he is in prison for selling and using heroin. His friend tells the narrator that he is going to be detoxified while in jail after which he will be let free. This identifies with the drug infested Harlem where James Baldwin grew up. Furthermore, Sonny’s old friend is always dirty and high. The narrator pities and at the same time hates him because he is not different from Sonny.

In Jamesʼ autobiography ʺA letter from a region in my mindʺ, he discovered the church and became involved in it. He says the fear of violent death in Harlem streets is what led him to get involved in church. James also talks about how his father was trying to get him to church while his friends were out there discovering Harlem for what it was. He describes how his friends were downtown busy, caring less about their looks, dress codes and character as they went on drinking sprees (Baldwin,20). Also, James narrates how the neighborhood changed his friends and turned them into bad habits just like it happens in Sonny’s Blues. That quote from his autobiography can be directly linked to a scenario in Sonny’s Blues when the narrator was in his classroom and he could hear the boys (his students) shouting and cursing at each other in the hallways.

In the mini-autobiography, Baldwin talks about how Harlem changed his friends and those around him. This is what precisely happens to the narrator’s brother in Sonny’s Blues. After discovering his brother was locked up because he was busted in a raid with heroin, the narrator starts to think about his younger brother. The narrator remembers that “Sonny was wild, but he wasn’t crazy, he’s always been a good kid, he hadn’t ever turned hard or evil, or disrespectful, the way kids can so quickly in Harlem.” The narrator reflects on how different his brother was from the ‘bad kids.’ He then continues saying “I didn’t want to believe that I’d see my brother going down, coming to nothing…in the condition, I’d already seen so many others” (Baldwin 64). Even though the story is fictional the author, is that he grew up in Harlem has witnessed how people came to destruction living in Harlem.

The characters in Sonny Blues are a reflection of how Baldwin viewed African Americans. During his childhood, there was a lot of racial tension, and there was what Baldwin

believed to be two types of African Americans. He uses the two main character of Sonny’s Blue

to represent these two type of African Americans during the civil rights movement. The narrator

of the story is the type he criticizes in many of his writing. The narrator is a teacher, who has

managed to get away from the darkness of Harlem, and established himself which gives him

prestige and sets him apart from other African Americans. The narrator being a school teacher

manages to distance himself from his community and tries to become like the white community

forgetting that he is still black and is looked at just like that. While Sonny represents the opposite

of that, he describes the African Americans who have been through the struggle and has accepted

that, and refuse to be blind to it(Baldwin 72).

The family structure displayed In Sonny’s Blues seems to be broken down. The narrator talks of how he brings Sonny from prison and asks him to stay with his wife’s family, with time they got misunderstandings with his sister-in-law for skipping school, and later he moves out to join the navy. In a flashback, the narrator also highlights how the two brothers used to fight with their father and amongst themselves. One particular fight ended up with Sonny asking his brother to consider him dead. The narrator left with the belief that Sonny at one point will need his help. This relates to Baldwin childhood where he was born to a single mother who later on got married to David Baldwin his step Father that later adopted him.

Although James was both obedient and intelligent both in school and at home, he was the least favorite compared to his other siblings. This relates to James literary works where in most cases one child is favored more than the other. In Sonny’s Blues, the narrator speaks of a rocky relationship between Sonny and his father. He further states that ʺSonny was the apple of his father’s eyeʺ, he goes on to say ʺhe loved Sonny so much and was frightened for himʺ (Baldwin 33). However, the narrator doesn’t speak of his relationship with his father.

Baldwin also suffered many of the alienation and misfortunes that most of the characters in Sonny’s Blues underwent. Significant among these was racial segregation. He fled from the United States to France in 1948, in a bid to get some relief from the kind of racism that he was experiencing. He went on to live in France for the remainder of his life thou he would return to the United States so often. In Sonny’s Blues, the narrator’s mother asks him to watch out for his brother. She told him about the story of their father as a young man when he watched his brother ran over by a car full of white men that never bothered to stop. It consequently traumatized the father and damaged the rest of his life (Campbell 87).

Baldwin also goes ahead to speak of the people, Harlem itself and the darkness of itself which represents the sorrow and poverty that both brothers are living in. The story opens with the dark images of his brother’s arrest. He says he feels ʺtrapped in the darkness that roared outsideʺ (Baldwin 5). The theme of darkness is further explored in the introduction of the family’s routine Sunday activities. Instead of being a happy and fulfilling time, the narrator often refers to the ʺdarknessʺ which has settled over everyone.

The story is full of tragedies that keep darkness hanging over the character’s heads. While Sonny is in prison, his daughter succumbs to polio. Also, the story that their mother told them about their father watching his brother being run over by a car full of white men who never bothered to stop portrays more the theme of tragedy and death.

The story highlights differences between the two brothers. Their seven-year age difference had an impact on their choices and behavior. Sonny chose to abuse heroin and jazz music whereas the narrator decided to be an algebra teacher. Musically, the narrator preferred the old jazz music whereas Sonny relates to the latest version of bebop. It is evidenced when Sonny got offended by his brother mentioned Armstrong’s name to which he corrected as a Charlie Parker fanatic. However, Savery asserts that the difference between Armstrong and Parker signify something bigger than just a different type of music. Sonny is drawn to Parker because he suffered a similar demise of drug and alcohol abuse just like him.

Baldwin lived in a time where there was rampant depression, world war 11, Civil Rights Movement, and the vast migration of African American to the north. All these affected Harlem significantly. It led to poverty, poor choices of alcohol and drug abuse, racism, and ultimately no sense of hope for the African Americans. Likewise in Sonny’s Blues, the two brothers have grown up in a poor, predominantly black community, Harlem. The lifestyle they lived was full of poverty and lack just like the life James lived in is time (Baldwin 39).

While the narrator seems to have everything right in life, his circumstances and material life have not changed. He continues to live in the housing projects with his family as he used to when he was growing up. The narrator has completed college, has served in the military, is now teaching algebra in a local school and yet his financial status has not changed much. Similarly, in James later life, he used to travel so often from France back to the United States for Civil Rights Movement talks to earn a living. James also did all sorts of odd jobs to support his writing career which was not progressing well (Campbell 65).

The theme of self-discovery is also evident in the story. The two brothers not only discover about themselves but also about each other throughout their lives. The outstanding questionable action of Sonny is his drug usage. He suffers the consequences of being a heroin addict on the streets but also serves jail sentence during which time he tells his brother that he would instead ʺblow my brains out than go through this againʺ(Baldwin 54). However, it is a result of this jail time that he returns to society drug-free and unites again with his estranged brother after years of their rocky relationship. From the age of 14 to 16, Baldwin was an active preacher in a small revivalist church. It is around this particular time that he wrote his most beautiful novel, ʺGo Tell it On the Mountainʺ (Baldwin 25). After his high school graduation, he began a period of self-study, literary apprenticeship in Greenwich Village and a series of ill-paid jobs. All this was in a bid to discover and develop him.

Moreover, the effect of Sonny’s drug choices equally affects his older brother. The narrator feels responsible for the person Sonny has turned out to be since he promised his mother before her passing on to always look out for him. Instead of supporting Sonny’s musical dream, he turned his back on him because he did not help his artistic vision. It portrays the kind of Harlem a place where James grew up in is. It also brings out the theme of betrayal, mistrust, and the injustices that were taking place in that particular society.

The fact that Baldwin chooses Harlem, where he grew up and has fond memories of is evidence enough to show that he wanted to tell his story. Furthermore, his choice of words and employment of the first-person narrative implies that he intended to tell the story himself. There was no better way of putting it than saying it in the first person and portraying vices that had infested Harlem which he witnessed while growing up and had first-hand information.

There is a prevalence theme of fury and rage. Throughout the story, the narrator repeatedly asserts the concealed anger Harlem community. It portrays both external and internal conflicts that haunt the characters. Fury and anger and products that came with being African American with limited opportunities within their community. At the beginning of the story, the narrator discovers that his students are ʺfilled with rageʺ (Baldwin 54). They know they have limited opportunities which knowledge breeds a destructive internal rage that threatens to destroy their lives. Having nowhere to go, they turn their anger onto themselves which leads to a life of darkness (Lemming 62)

The narrator also observes a ʺfuriousʺ man drops change into a church bucket. Fury is evident everywhere in Harlem’s daily life even in the revivals held in the streets. It is a fury instigated by desire and desperation, and it finds its form of expression in Sonny’s music that he plays as the story ends. Much as it is difficult and painful, it makes Sonny’s jazz music possible.it also gives life to religious revival which Sonny passes on the streets (Troupe 59).

There is apparent suffering in Harlem community marked by despair. This was influenced or also seen in James upbringing whereby he grew up suffering. It is evidenced by the narrator confessing that he is not surprised by Sonny’s fate. He further admits that he is guilty of not working to prevent Sonny’s fate. The narrator seems to be separated from the suffering caused by drugs, and he realizes that his job and virtuous life have not brought him relief from the pain around him (Troupe, 68).

In Sonny Blues, there is also blurred the distinction between blood relatives and community members. It is seen when the narrator mistakes Sonny’s childhood friend to Sonny. He asks the narrator for money which he reluctantly gives him. He dislikes him because he is usually high and dirty looking. When the narrator saw him that day, he realized that he suddenly despises him. This man is not related to the narrator and his brother. He came to make sure the narrator knows what happened to his brother Sonny.

In conclusion, James Baldwin writes about his real-life experiences of childhood, school times, family life, racism, violence, poverty, fury, and rage. Harlem community which he lived in at the time was infested with all those vices, and he successfully portrays them in the story Sonny’s Blues (Campbell 55)

Work cited

Baldwin, James, and Jack London. Sonny’s Blues. Difusión, Centro de Investigación y Publicaciones de Idiomas, 2010: 12-200

Baldwin, James. Go Tell it on the Mountain. Vol. 371. Everyman’s Library, 2016: 1-173

Campbell, James. Talking at the gates: A life of James Baldwin. Univ of California Press, 2002: 53-99

Leeming, David. James Baldwin: a biography. Skyhorse Publishing, Inc., 2015: 11-163

Troupe, Quincy. James Baldwin: the legacy. Simon & Schuster, 1989:4-93

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