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JAMES BALDWIN
A GREAT AFRICAN AMERICAN
          POET
• Born in New York City, James Baldwin
 turned to writing after an early career as a
 boy preacher in Harlem's storefront
 churches.
• He attended Frederick Douglass Junior
 High School in Harlem and later graduated
 from DeWitt Clinton High School, where
 he was editor of the school magazine
SPECIAL EVENTS IN HIS LIFE

• He eventually became one of the most
    prominent intellectuals of the CIVIL RIGHTS
    MOVEMENT.
•   His initial stance was that blacks should work for
    equality peacefully, but as time progressed his
    views became more MILITANT. He warned in
    The Fire Next Time that American race relations
    were in danger of reaching violent conclusions.
• Baldwin's first novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain,
  was published in 1953, and received critical
  acclaim. Two years later, his first collection of
  essays, Notes of a Native Son, again won
  favorable critical acclaim. This was followed, in
  1956, by the publication of his second novel,
  Giovanni's Room. His second collection of
  essays, Nobody Knows My Names, brought him
  into the literary spotlight and established him as
  a major voice in American literature.
THE MAN HIMSELF
• As a child, Baldwin found reading an avenue of escape
    from poverty and insecurity
•   His first story was published in a church newspaper at
    the age of 12.
•   Celebrated black writer Richard Wright became a mentor
    and father figure to him
•   Becoming increasingly frustrated with racism in America,
    he moved to Paris in 1948 with $40 in his pocket
•   He refused to be categorized as a "Negro author" or
    "Gay author" but rather an American author
• The writer James Baldwin once made a scathing
  comment about his fellow Americans: "It is
  astonishing that in a country so devoted to the
  individual, so many people should be afraid to
  speak."
  – As an openly gay, African-American writer living
    through the battle for civil rights, Baldwin had reason
    to be afraid — and yet, he wasn't. A television
    interviewer once asked Baldwin to describe the
    challenges he faced starting his career as "a black,
    impoverished homosexual," to which Baldwin laughed
    and replied: "I thought I'd hit the jackpot."
• I HOPE YOU ENJOYED THE
 PRESENTATION

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James baldwin

  • 1. JAMES BALDWIN A GREAT AFRICAN AMERICAN POET
  • 2. • Born in New York City, James Baldwin turned to writing after an early career as a boy preacher in Harlem's storefront churches.
  • 3. • He attended Frederick Douglass Junior High School in Harlem and later graduated from DeWitt Clinton High School, where he was editor of the school magazine
  • 4. SPECIAL EVENTS IN HIS LIFE • He eventually became one of the most prominent intellectuals of the CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. • His initial stance was that blacks should work for equality peacefully, but as time progressed his views became more MILITANT. He warned in The Fire Next Time that American race relations were in danger of reaching violent conclusions.
  • 5. • Baldwin's first novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, was published in 1953, and received critical acclaim. Two years later, his first collection of essays, Notes of a Native Son, again won favorable critical acclaim. This was followed, in 1956, by the publication of his second novel, Giovanni's Room. His second collection of essays, Nobody Knows My Names, brought him into the literary spotlight and established him as a major voice in American literature.
  • 7. • As a child, Baldwin found reading an avenue of escape from poverty and insecurity • His first story was published in a church newspaper at the age of 12. • Celebrated black writer Richard Wright became a mentor and father figure to him • Becoming increasingly frustrated with racism in America, he moved to Paris in 1948 with $40 in his pocket • He refused to be categorized as a "Negro author" or "Gay author" but rather an American author
  • 8.
  • 9. • The writer James Baldwin once made a scathing comment about his fellow Americans: "It is astonishing that in a country so devoted to the individual, so many people should be afraid to speak." – As an openly gay, African-American writer living through the battle for civil rights, Baldwin had reason to be afraid — and yet, he wasn't. A television interviewer once asked Baldwin to describe the challenges he faced starting his career as "a black, impoverished homosexual," to which Baldwin laughed and replied: "I thought I'd hit the jackpot."
  • 10. • I HOPE YOU ENJOYED THE PRESENTATION