Baldwin and 'Down on the Cross'
Not everything that is faced can be changed but nothing can be changed until it is faced."
James Baldwin
The now flourishing talent of James Baldwin had no easy birth, and he did not emerge overnight, as some of his new discoverers would have you believe. For years this talent was in incubation in the ghetto of Harlem, before he went to Europe nearly a decade ago in an attempt to discover the United States and how he and his people relate to it. The book in which that discovery is portrayed, The Fire Next Time (New York: Dial Press, 1963), is a continuation of his search for place and definition.
The hardships of that search were recently described by Sterling Stuckey, Chairman of the Committee of Negro Culture and History:
The tragedy of the American Negro is born of the twin evils of the slave experience and varying patterns of segregation, supported by law and custom, that have been nation-wide in dimension for a century. The consequences of the Negro's quasi-freedom, unfolded against a grim backdrop of two and a half centuries of slavery, have been no less destructive to his spiritual world -- his hierarchy of values and his image of himself -- than to his every day world of work.
This quasi-freedom of the Negro is often more humiliating than slavery and more difficult to fight, because it gives the Negro the illusion of freedom while denying him the fact. Thus the Negro continues his alien status in a country where his people have lived for more than three hundred years. The Fire Next Time, like most of Baldwin's writings, is about this alienation.
James Baldwin's essay "Down on the Cross" opens up an entirely new world to most readers. It opens the reader to the harsh world of...
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