K




Keady, Sylvia H. "Richard Wright's Women Characters and Inequality." 

	Black American Literature Forum 10 (1976): 124-28.

Kearns, Edward. "The 'Fate' Section of Native Son." 

	Contemporary Literature 12 (1971): 146-55.

Kennedy, James G. "The Content and Form of Native Son." 

	College English 34 (1972): 269-83.

Kent, George E. "Richard Wright: Blackness and the Adventure of 

	Western Culture." Blackness and the Adventure of Western 

	Culture. Chicago: Third World Press, 1972.

Kinnamon, Keneth. The Emergence of Richard Wright: A Study in 

	Literature and Society. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois 

	Press, 1972.

---. "Call and Response: Intertextuality in Two Autobiographical 

	Works by Richard Wright and Maya Angelou." In Belief vs. 

	Theory in Black American Literary Criticism, edited by 

	Joe Weixlemann and Chester J. Fontenot. Greenwood, FL: 

	Penkevill, 1986.

---., Joseph Benson, Michel Fabre, and Craig Werner. Richard 

	Wright Bibliography: Fifty Years of Criticism and Commentary, 

	1933-1982. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1988.

---. "A Selective Bibliography of Wright Scholarship and Criticism, 

	1983-1988." Mississippi Quarterly 12 (Fall 1989): 451-71.

---. "How Native Son Was Born." In Writing the American 

	Classics, edited by James Barbour and Tom Quirk. Chapel 

	Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1990.

---. New Essays on Native Son." Cambridge, MA: Cambridge 

	University Press, 1990.

Kinnamon, Kenneth, and Fabre, Michel. Conversations with Richard

	Wright. Jackson, MS: University of Mississippi Press, 1993.

Kiuchi, Toru. "Richard Wright and Asia." Chiba Review 10 (1988): 

	35-42.

Klotman, Phyllis R. "Moral Distancing as a Rhetorical Technique in 

	Native Son: A Note on 'Fate.'" CLA Journal 18 

	(1974): 284-91.

Kodama, Sanehide. "Japanese Influences on Richard Wright in His Last 

	Years: English Haiku as a New Genre." Tamkang Review 

	15 (Autumn 1985-Summer 1985): 63-73. 

Kostelanetz, Richard. "The Politics of Unresolved Quests in the 

	Novels of Richard Wright." Xavier University Studies 

	8 (1969): 31-64.

---. Politics in the African-American Novel: James Weldon Johnson, 

	W.E.B. DuBois, Richard Wright, and Ralph Ellison. New 

	York: Greenwood Press, 1991.



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