Preface<br>Chapter 1 Introduction<br> 1.1 A Brief Survey of the Critical Reception of Richard Wrights Novels<br> 1.2 Double Consciousness and the Evolution of Triple Consciousness in the Process of Acculturation<br>1.2.1 The Theory of Acculturation<br>1.2.2 Du Boiss Concept of Double Consciousness<br>1.2.3 The Evolution of Triple Consciousness in Richard Wrights Fiction<br>Chapter 2 The Impact of Acculturation on African Americans<br> 2.1 African Americans during the Great Migration and Great Depression<br> 2.2 Two Types of Acculturation<br>2.2.1 Negative Acculturation<br>2.2.2 Positive Acculturation<br> 2.3 The Irony Resulting from the Positive Acculturation<br> 2.4 The Weakening of the African Cultural Tradition and the Rise of Triple Consciousness in the Process of<br>Acculturation<br>2.4.1 The Decline of the African Cultural Tradition<br>2.4.2 The Rise of the Third Consciousness<br>Chapter 3 The Dilemma of Triple Consciousness<br> 3.1 Blacks Response to the White World<br>3.1.1 Submissiveness<br>3.1.2 Rebelliousness<br>3.1.3 Garveyism<br> 3.2 Black American Dreams and Their Disruption<br>3.2.1 American Dreams of the Black Underclass <br>3.2.2 Lower Middle-Class Blacks American Dreams<br>3.2.3 Middle-Class Blacks American Dreams<br> 3.3 Blacks Identity Crises<br>3.3.1 Invisibility<br>3.3.2 Outsideness<br>3.3.3 Otherness<br>Chapter 4 The Tension of Triple Consciousness<br> 4.1 The Source of Tension<br>4.1.1 The Color Line and Segregation Which Help to Shape the Two Hostile Groups<br>4.1.2 Whites Hatred of Blacks<br>4.1.3 Blacks Hatred of Whites<br> 4.2 The Warring Ideals in a Black Mans Triple Consciousness<br> 4.3 The Socialized Ambivalence and the Dogged Strength that Keeps Black Bodies From Being Torn Asunder<br> 4.4 Two Outcomes Caused by the Social Repression of the Third Consciousness<br>4.4.1 The Blacks Self-Hatred<br>4.4.2 The Blacks Self-Assertion<br>Epilogue<br>Works Cited<br>中文参考文献
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