Recently I opened Notes of a
Native Son (originally published in 1955), by one of America's greatest writers, James Baldwin (1924 - 1987). The Francophile in me made me turn first in this book of essays
on life in Harlem, the protest novel, movies, and Americans abroad to the
two essays about his experiences in Paris, France. As I was reading Baldwin's Paris essays, I was thinking how sad that his early relationship with the City of Light could not have been more positive. However, as a quote on the Fantastic Quotes page of this blog states, "Everyone develops his or her own personal relationship with Paris."
…
for as soon as I was out of bed, I hopefully took notebook and fountain pen off
to the upstairs room of the Flore, where I consumed rather a lot of coffee, and
as evening approached …
There is a general mention of the cafés of St.
Germain des Près:
…
in one of the cafés
of St. Germain des Près, I was discovered by this New Yorker and only because
we found ourselves in Paris we immediately established the illusion that we had
been fast friends back in the good old U.S.A.
The Gare St. Lazare and Ile de la Cité are also
referenced in "Equal in Paris." The other Paris essay in Notes of a Native Son is titled “Encounter on the Seine: Black Meets Brown,” which speaks to the differences between Africans’ and American Negroes’ experiences in Paris, based upon the differences in their histories. Places such as Chez Inez, La Sorbonne, and the Place de la Concorde are mentioned in this essay.
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*Note: Baldwin's personal relationship with Paris, France, eventually became better; for he lived in the South of France for most of his later life, and he died in Saint-Paul-de-Vence.
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