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James Baldwin, Black writer and civil rights activist, dies of cancer in France.
1987 (Dec 1)
James Baldwin, Black writer and civil rights activist, died of cancer in St. Paul de Venece, France, at age sixty-three. Baldwin had moved to France in 1948 to escape what he felt was “the stifling racial bigotry” of the United States. Baldwin, the son of “an autocratic preacher who hated his son,” was born in the Harlem section of New York City in 1924. He began writing while a student at the DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx and by his early twenties was publishing essays and reviews in such publications as the Nation, the New Leader, Commentary, and Partisan Review. Baldwin also began socializing with a circle of New York writers and intellectuals, including William Barrett, Irving Howe, and Lionel Trilling. A prolific author, Baldwin published his three most important collections of essays: Notes of a Native Son (1955), Nobody Knows My Name (1961), and The Fire Next Time (1963) during the height of the civil rights movement. Some critics, the New York Times reported, "said his language was sometimes too elliptical, his indictments sometimes too sweeping. But then [his] prose, with its apocalyptic tone-a legacy of his early exposure to religious fundamentalism-and its passionate yet distanced sense of advocacy, seemed perfect for a period in which Blacks in the South lived under continued threats of racial violence and in which civil rights workers faced brutal beatings and even death." Other important works by Baldwin included Go Tell it on the Mountain (1953), his first book and novel; Giovanni's Room (1956) and Another Country (1962), which contains a frank discussion of homosexuality; and the drama Blues for Mister Charlie (1964). In the preface to Blues for Mister Charlie, Baldwin noted that the work had been inspired “very distantly” by the murder of Emmett Till, a Black youth in Mississippi in 1955. He wrote: “What is ghastly and really almost hopeless in our racial situation now is that the crimes we have committed are so great and so unspeakable that the acceptance of this knowledge would lead, literally, to madness. The human being, then, in order to protect himself, closes his eyes, compulsively repeats his crimes, and enters a spiritual darkness which no one can describe.” During the civil rights movement, Baldwin not only wrote about the struggle, but helped raise money for it and organized protest marches. He was also an early opponent of the United State's involvement in the Vietnam War and a critic of discrimination against homosexuals. Baldwin's writings and activism were recognized by many groups both in this country and abroad. Perhaps the most distinguished of these was the Legion of Honor, France's highest national award, which was presented to him in 1986. Among those eulogizing Baldwin was a fellow African American novelist, Ralph Ellison, who commented, “America has lost one of its most gifted writers.” Henry Louis Gates Jr., a literary critic and professor at Cornell University, said Baldwin “educated an entire generation of Americans about the civil rights struggle and the sensibility of Afro-Americans as we faced and conquered the final barriers in our long quest for civil rights.”
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.