James Baldwin Review | |
The Devil Finds Work: A Hollywood Love Story (as Written by James Baldwin) | |
D. Quentin Miller1  | |
[1] Suffolk University; | |
关键词: the devil finds work; james baldwin; film; film criticism; history of american cinema; race; love; exile; expatriate; | |
DOI : 10.7227/JBR.7.5 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
Baldwin’s The Devil Finds Work (1976) has proven challenging since its publication because readers and critics have trouble classifying it. The challenge may be related to a common feature of Baldwin criticism, namely a tendency to compare late career works to early ones and to find them lacking: the experimental nature of later works of nonfiction like No Name in the Street (1972), The Devil Finds Work, and The Evidence of Things Not Seen (1985) does not square easily with the more conventional essays that made Baldwin famous in his early years. I attempt to reframe The Devil Finds Work not through a comparison to other Baldwin essays, but rather through a comparison to his fiction, specifically the novel Giovanni’s Room. I posit that a greater appreciation for Devil can result from thinking of it as a story, specifically the story of a failed love affair.