Richard Wright is seen as an outsider because of his extreme poverty and not having a father figure. …show more content…
15) Richard is an outsider because he is missing out on father and son experiences that other kids experience like playing catch, how to shave, and how to fix things that mothers don’t teach their kids. Richard is an outsider because he is missing out on father and son experiences that other kids experience like playing catch, how to shave, and how to fix things that mothers don’t teach their kids. When Richard is walking to a grocery store to buy food, he stumbles upon white people eating and says, “Watching the white people eat would make my empty stomach churn and I would grow vaguely angry. Why could I not eat when I was hungry?” (R.W. 19) His perpetual hunger further separates him from his peers through extreme poverty, when other kids his age can eat when they're hungry. While others feast he is excluded from his nourished peers due to his never ending hunger which turns into hate, anger, and frustration when he cannot eat while other people can eat. When Richard and his family goes to the courtroom for child support, his mom finally says,