Sonny's Blues/Annotated Bibliography: Difference between revisions
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| first1 = Eui Young | | first1 = Eui Young | ||
| date = 2018 | | date = 2018 | ||
| title = The Sociology of the ghetto in James Baldwin's SONNY BLUES | | title = The Sociology of the ghetto in James Baldwin's SONNY BLUES | ||
| url = https://doi.org/10.1080/00144940.2018.1499604 | | url = https://doi.org/10.1080/00144940.2018.1499604 | ||
| journal = The Explicator | | journal = The Explicator | ||
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| issue = 3 | | issue = 3 | ||
| pages = 161-165 | | pages = 161-165 | ||
}} | }} This literary criticism article explains the sociology of the ghetto in James Baldwin's Sonny Blues b | ||
{{Refend}} | {{Refend}} |
Revision as of 14:03, 29 September 2021
- Stone, Caitlin (Oct 2013). "Lost and Found: The Fall of Grace in Sonny's Blues". The Explicator. 71 (4): 251–254. Stone explains the significance of the death of grace and how it relates to the brothers. Topics addressed include the symbolic associations of the Grace's death and the religious "a fall from grace" in Christian terminology.
Kim, Eui Young (2018). "The Sociology of the ghetto in James Baldwin's SONNY BLUES". The Explicator. 76 (3): 161–165. This literary criticism article explains the sociology of the ghetto in James Baldwin's Sonny Blues b