43 pages • 1 hour read
James BaldwinA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
“Everybody’s Protest Novel” was first published by in spring of 1949 in the first issue of Zero, an English-language literary magazine launched in Paris that year. The essay was republished a few months later in June 1949 in the more established magazine Partisan Review, launching Baldwin’s writing career. The essay analyzes Uncle Tom’s Cabin, the novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe, first published in 1852. Baldwin sees Stowe’s novel as indicative of a uniquely American literary genre, the protest novel; and he views the genre itself as an American cultural condition.
The intention of the genre, notes Baldwin, is to “bring greater freedom to the oppressed,” and for this reason, he is willing to forgive the offense it causes (31). He explains that Uncle Tom’s Cabin is a bad novel because it traffics in White sentiment, which for Baldwin, betrays a striking aversion to the truth of lived experience, both Black and White. Without the requisite depth of character and the complex freedom that marks the human condition, the novel fails as literature—and at once succeeds commendably as a protest document. Baldwin acknowledges that, as a protest document, it is both historic and prescient. “The novels of Negro oppression” written in Baldwin’s own time, a full century after Uncle Tom’s Cabin was first published, remain couched in the same simplistic declarative spirit expressed by Stowe; that American society is horrible and Americans ought to be ashamed.
By James Baldwin
Another Country
James Baldwin
A Talk to Teachers
James Baldwin
Blues for Mister Charlie
James Baldwin
Giovanni's Room
James Baldwin
Going To Meet The Man
James Baldwin
Go Tell It on the Mountain
James Baldwin
I Am Not Your Negro
James Baldwin
If Beale Street Could Talk
James Baldwin
If Black English Isn't a Language, Then Tell Me, What Is?
James Baldwin
Nobody Knows My Name: More Notes of a Native Son
James Baldwin
No Name in the Street
James Baldwin
Sonny's Blues
James Baldwin
Stranger in the Village
James Baldwin
The Amen Corner
James Baldwin
The Fire Next Time
James Baldwin
The Rockpile
James Baldwin
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection