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2023 | 16 | 2 | 29-52

Article title

Love, Labor, and Loss: The Trans-Atlantic Homelessness of James Baldwin

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
How does an African-American writer experience Americanness? What does one do when one feels himself born an outcast in one’s own country and then discovers that that country is the only one he can regard as home? Despite-or perhaps because of-his extraordinary gifts, James Baldwin viewed himself as a stranger in America, and his sense of exclusion was threefold, arising not only from his blackness but also from his homosexuality and his identity as an intellectual. At the age of 24, fearing that his life in the United States might soon topple either into violence or a fatal self-contempt, Baldwin traveled to Paris, where he remained for many years. In a superficial sense, Baldwin’s transatlantic life afforded him two homes instead of one. Yet, as his writings confirm, Baldwin’s experiences outside the United States convinced him that he had no true spiritual home anywhere. He could not be truly, comfortably himself in either location. This essay discusses how Baldwin’s European sojourns served to confirm his Americanness - a confirmation he could regard only as bittersweet and tragic. Having observed White Americans both at home and abroad, Baldwin was able to reflect eloquently on the American need to regard itself as somehow exempt from the judgments that hang heavily over the rest of the world. He saw America’s desperate insistence on its own innocence as pervading the nation’s character, whether it was expressed in racial attitudes, foreign policy, or the complex repressions of sexual longing. And that need for exemption circled back to America’s distrust of serious thought and the fear that earnest intellectual labor would tear aside once and for all the mask and myth of American purity. The failure of America, he believed, was a failure of honesty compounded by an incapacity to love. Finding nothing outside of America in which to place his faith, Baldwin placed his profoundly reluctant confidence in the United States. Like Baldwin, we must place our reliance in sympathy, forgiveness, and a rediscovery of common ground. We must, in short, rediscover love, for we, too, have no other place to go.

Year

Volume

16

Issue

2

Pages

29-52

Physical description

Dates

published
2023

Contributors

  • John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York, USA

References

  • Adbur-Rahman, Aliyyah I. “‘As Though a Metaphor Were Tangible’: Baldwin’s Identities.” The Cambridge Companion to James Baldwin, edited by Michele Elam, Cambridge University Press, 2015, pp. 164–179.
  • Baldwin, James. “Down at the Cross.” Collected Essays. Library of America, 1998, pp. 296–347.
  • Baldwin, James. “Freaks and the Ideal of American Manhood.” Collected Essays, Library of America, 1998, pp. 814–829.
  • Baldwin, James. “The American Dream and the American Negro.” Collected Essays. Library of America, 1998, pp. 714–719.
  • Baldwin, James. “The Black Boy Looks at the White Boy.” Collected Essays. Library of America, 1998, pp. 269–285.
  • Baldwin, James. “The Discovery of What It Means to Be an American.” Collected Essays. Library of America, 1998, pp. 137–142.
  • Baldwin, James. “The Fire Next Time.” Collected Essays. Library of America, 1998, pp. 287–347.
  • Baldwin, James. Giovanni’s Room. Vintage International, 2013.
  • Baldwin, James. “Words of a Native Son.” Collected Essays. Library of America, 1998, pp. 707–713.
  • Baldwin, James. Interview with Mavis Nicholson. https://youtu.be/3Wht4NSf7E4. Accessed 19 April 2023.
  • Baldwin, James. Interview with Sylvia Chase. https://youtu.be/9jXwWCyMJyc. Accessed 19 April 2023.
  • Barshay, Jill. “The Number of College Graduates in the Humanities Drops for the Eighth Consecutive Year.” The Hechinger Report. www.amacad.org/news/college-graduates-humanities-drops-eighth-consecutive-year. Accessed 19 April 2023.
  • Clark, Sir Kenneth. Civilisation: A Personal View. Harper & Row, 1969.
  • Darsey, James. “Baldwin’s Cosmopolitan Loneliness.” James Baldwin Now, edited by Dwight A. McBride, New York University Press, 1999, pp. 187–207.
  • Du Bois, W. E. B. “Our Spiritual Strivings.” The Souls of Black Folk. Library of America, 1986, pp. 363–371.
  • Freeburg, Christopher. “Baldwin and the Occasion of Love.” The Cambridge Companion to James Baldwin, edited by Michele Elam, Cambridge University Press, 2015, pp. 180–193.
  • Kushner, Tony. Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes. Theatre Communications Group, 2013;
  • Lukács, George. The Theory of the Novel. The MIT Press, 1974.
  • Marcus, Greil. Quoted in Simon Reynolds, “Greil Marcus: A Life in Writing,” The Guardian, 17 Feb. 2012, p. 12.
  • Mitchell, Joni. “Free Man in Paris.” Court and Spark, Asylum Records, 1974. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xW_IS-DPZ1E. Accessed 19 April 2023.
  • Shulman, George. “Baldwin, Prophecy, and Politics.” A Political Companion to James Baldwin, edited by Susan J. McWilliams, University Press of Kentucky, 2017, pp. 151–170.
  • Standley, Fred L., and Louis H. Pratt, editors. Conversations with James Baldwin. University Press of Mississippi, 1989.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

Biblioteka Nauki
35191581

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-doi-10_31261_rias_16028
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