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They hate because they fear, and they fear because they feel that the deepest feelings of their lives are being assaulted and outraged. And they do not know why they are powerless pawns in a blind play of social forces.
Richard Wright
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Richard Wright
Age: 52 †
Born: 1908
Born: September 4
Died: 1960
Died: November 28
Autobiographer
Novelist
Playwright
Poet
Short Story Writer
Writer
Natchez
Mississippi
Richard Nathaniel Wright
Lives
Assaulted
Hate
Pawns
Fear
Outraged
Social
Powerless
Feelings
Deepest
Play
Forces
Feel
Blind
Feels
Force
More quotes by Richard Wright
Violence is a personal necessity for the oppressed...It is not a strategy consciously devised. It is the deep, instinctive expression of a human being denied individuality.
Richard Wright
Goddamnit, look! We live here and they live there. We black and they white. They got things and we ain't. They do things and we can't. It's just like livin' in jail.
Richard Wright
All literature is protest.
Richard Wright
Men can starve from a lack of self-realization as much as they can from a lack of bread.
Richard Wright
Reading was like a drug, a dope. The novels created moods in which I lived for days.
Richard Wright
Hunger has always been more or less at my elbow when I played, but now I began to wake up at night to find hunger standing at my bedside, staring at my gauntly.
Richard Wright
Whenever my environment had failed to support or nourish me, I had clutched at books.
Richard Wright
He had lived and acted on the assumption that he was alone, and now he saw that he had not been. What he had done made others suffer. No matter how much he would long for them to forget him, they would not be able to. His family was a part of him, not only in blood, but in spirit.
Richard Wright
Each day when you see us black folk upon the dusty land of your farm or upon the hard pavement of your city streets, you usually take it for granted and think you know us, but our history is far stranger than you suspect, and we are not what we seem.
Richard Wright
The more closely the author thinks of why he wrote, the more he comes to regard his imagination as a kind of self-generating cement which glued his facts together, and his emotions as a kind of dark and obscure designer of those facts. Reluctantly, he comes to the conclusion that to account for his book is to account for his life.
Richard Wright
It was not a matter of believing or disbelieving what I read, but of feeling something new, of being affected by something that made the look of the world different.
Richard Wright
I listened, vaguely knowing now that I had committed some awful wrong that I could not undo, that I had uttered words I could not recall even though I ached to nullify them, kill them, turn back time to the moment before I had talked so that I could have another chance to save myself.
Richard Wright
I was not leaving the south to forget the south, but so that some day I might understand it
Richard Wright
It had been only through books-at best, no more than vicarious cultural transfusions-that I had managaed to keep myself alive in a negatively vital way. Whenever my environment had failed to support or nourish me, I had clutched at books.
Richard Wright
Don't leave inferences to be drawn when evidence can be presented.
Richard Wright
there are times when life's ends are so raveled that reason and sense cry out that we stop and gather them together again before we can proceed
Richard Wright