Preview

Sonnys Blues

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
628 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Sonnys Blues
tells of seeing his brother play piano in a jazz club, and of sending up to his brother a drink—a mixture of Scotch whiskey and milk. As the story closes this unusual mixture sets atop Sonny’s piano “like the very cup of trembling.”

Discuss how this drink serves as a symbolic conclusion to Baldwin’s story. How does it symbolize for the reader the resolution, or synthesis, of various tensions in the story? Indeed what are the main lines of tension, opposition, and division in “Sonny’s Blues”?

* At the end of the story, the narrator describes a glass sitting over Sonny’s piano as shaking “like the very cup of trembling” to highlight what a difficult and complicated position Sonny is in. This image is borrowed from the Bible, where the cup of trembling is used as a symbol to describe the suffering and fear that have plagued the people. The biblical passage promises a relief from that suffering, but Baldwin’s use of the cup of trembling as a symbol is less overt.

* Sonny’s drinking from the cup of trembling serves as a reminder of all the suffering he has endured, while also offering the chance for redemption and peace. As a musician, Sonny takes all his suffering and that of those around him and transforms it into something beautiful.

* Like the figures from the Bible, Sonny is moving toward salvation, but his fate remains uncertain. Perhaps he will continue to suffer, suffering being the cost he has to pay for being a musician. There is something Christ like about Sonny’s pain, and suffering for Sonny is at once inevitable and redemptive

* At the end of the story, it remains unclear whether he will continue to suffer in order to play his music or whether a greater peace and redemption awaits everyone involved. The fact that the glass is filled with scotch and milk only further highlights the tension and duality Sonny faces.

SUFFERING QUOTE

A great block of ice got settled in my belly and kept melting there slowly all day long,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In Sonny’s Blues the narrator was a bit apprehensive towards Sonny’s music and passion for playing the piano. He felt that it would only drag Sonny back down the same road to heroin use that he had recovered from. At the same time the narrator showed a great deal of love toward his brother because he kept his promise to his mother to look out for Sonny. When the narrator sees Sonny perform in the nightclub, he notices that’s the way Sonny escapes his problems. The narrator also at that same moment realized, he too is in a way like his brother, looking…

    • 706 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Baldwin’s story, there a several hidden messages, but there are two important quotes that reveals the relation between the characters. At the beginning of the story, any reader can pick on what it is the status of the relation…

    • 448 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After the killing of their son, Sarah and Macon's relationship went downhill. Macon was not very comforting of caring towards his wife, and she was not happy with that. When they are on their way home from a short trip, Sarah tells Macon that she is leaving him. This is the first sign of change after the death of their son. Macon who is not used to change is shocked. Not only has Macon lost a son, he has now lost his wife. This impromptu divorce affects Macon's daily life and…

    • 518 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Sonnys Blues Writemode

    • 1557 Words
    • 4 Pages

    “Sonny’s Blues” is a short story by the author James Baldwin. It is a story about two brothers and `their severe struggles in Harlem and the different ways in which they handled them. The author shows through the narrator and his brother Sonny how two individuals can follow two totally different life paths, be distant for most of their lives, but in the end find common ground through a shared understanding of the pain of human struggle, which this case expressed by Jazz. Through giving the main character specific character traits, the author shapes the central conflict that gives meaning to the story. The central conflict follows the formula person vs. self, because the narrator struggles between feeling the desire to take care of Sonny and the impulse to throwing Sonny to the curb because of his always values and bad decisions. The narrator starts to realize many things starting after the death of his daughter Grace and culminating with him finally listening to his brother play music. The central idea resolves it self by the Narrator empathizing with his brothers struggles in life and finally understanding through Sonny’s music how he dealt with that suffering. This allows him to realize that he must embrace the conflicting nature of his feelings for Sonny and that the bonds of brotherhood should transcend these things.…

    • 1557 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Baldwin is conscious of his impotence in not being able to help his ill father or in dealing with systemic racism. The bitterness that consumed the older Baldwin, because of paranoia, also consumed Baldwin in the face of segregation. As Baldwin recalls his youth, he mentions his father being mentally and physically abusive because of his illness. Later, when Baldwin acts violently at the restaurant, he fears that his bitterness has made him violent too. While the men’s problems are different, Baldwin connects his father’s internal conflicts with his own external struggles. What I take away from this essay is a son trying to make amends with his father. Once Baldwin encounters racism in New Jersey, he forgives his father because he understands…

    • 134 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Near the end of the story, a waitress at the bar where Sonny is playing gives Sonny a glass of scotch and milk, which Sonny sips and puts back on on the top of the piano. The narrator shows this by writing, “he sipped from it and looked toward me and nodded. Then he put it back on the top of the piano. For me, then, as they began to play again, it glowed and shook above my brothers head like the very cup of trembling” (48). When saying this, he is showing that Sonny has control over his life’s suffering, and the suffering of everyone else. When the narrator says, “the cup of trembling,” that is a reference to Isaiah 51: 17-23. The cup of trembling hold life’s suffering, and Sonny has just sipped that cup, which is represented as the scotch and milk. The milk in the glass represents that of a child, while the scotch in the glass represents that of an adult. Those two ingredients together represents all of life’s suffering, and when Sonny sips that cup, he is showing that he is in control of his own and the people around him…

    • 496 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The story “Sonny’s Blues” by James Baldwin makes excellent use of multiple literary elements. Namely, I think the writer utilizes symbolism and the nuances of point of view to give the story a deeper connotation that could not be said plainly. The meat of the story is about an unnamed older brother’s relationship and differences with his younger brother, Sonny. Sonny’s aspiration to become a jazz pianist leads him in an opposite direction than his brother, and into a world where the common suffering is dealt with by heroin and music. The fundamental differences between the brothers in their lack of understanding for each other and their gradual acceptance of one another is highlighted and explained by what the symbolism adds to the story and the change in the narrator’s point of view at the end of the story.…

    • 1558 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues,” the reader meets Sonny, a recovering addict, and his older brother, a high school teacher. Although these two brothers have completely different lives and personalities, the author’s use of symbolism brings them more tightly together like a real family. Baldwin uses symbols such as ice, lightness and darkness, and jazz music to add more depth and meaning to “Sonny’s Blues.”…

    • 1275 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The narrator states, “ I heard what he had gone through, and would continue to go through until he came to rest in Earth[...]And he was giving it back, as everything must be given back, so that, passing through death it can live forever (47).” Sonny uses his blues as his personal form of expression. His blues gives back the memories he grips so that it can still feel alive though, it may be gone it will never be forgotten. Sonny’s music helps his brother understand his choice to be musician. It also gives his brother the gift of being able to see his mother's face again, to feel the hard times his mother encountered in her life, to see the road where his grandfather had died, and also he to see his daughter again, as well as feeling his wife's tears again (47-48). Sonny's blues weren't just blues, the idea of his blues being much more than that is expressed as he let go of his feelings it brought back the impossible feelings and images that were once gone for his brother. Under this circumstance, the narrator finally realized Sonny’s way of communicating was through his blues and all he had to do was listen. All along he wanted Sonny to go to school and become his perception of someone though, Sonny told him plenty of times he knew what he wanted to do. What he didn't realize was that he just needed to listen as seen in the line “he would never be free until…

    • 1227 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    In Baldwin’s piece, Sonny is unable to communicate his suffering with his brother and the people within the community without the use of music. Sonny is unable to connect with his brother throughout the story. He denies to believe Sonny’s life as a drug addict, “I couldn't believe it: but what I mean by that is that I couldn't find any room for it anywhere inside…

    • 1871 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sonny's Blues Vs Find

    • 782 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The strategy of having Sonny's brother tell the story shows us that his attitude and negative feelings and disapproval of his brother changes as the story progresses. The story starts off with Sonny's brother's finding out that Sonny had been arrested for heroin, and his anger and shame is clearly displayed. When Sonny made the decision to wanting to be a jazz musician, he worked at it seriously and studiously. When he was living with his sister-in-law's family while studying music, for example, they said that the amount of determination he had to jazz music was so heartfelt "it wasn't like living with a person at all, it was like living with sound." However, as the story progresses, at the end of the story that the brother begins to understands and realize something of the massive appeal of jazz music to his brother by when finally the narrator goes to the club where his brother plays to hear him the first time, he sees how his feelings towards his brother had been wrong and was prejudiced as shown by his own feelings when he listens to the type of music his brother plays. While listening to his brother play he goes on to describe his feelings “I seemed to hear with what burning he had made it his, and what burning we had yet to make it ours, how we could cease lamenting. Freedom lurked around us…

    • 782 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sonny's Blues

    • 861 Words
    • 4 Pages

    One literary criticisms that come into play is the characters in the book” Sonny ‘s Blues”…

    • 861 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Salvation In Sonny's Blues

    • 1521 Words
    • 7 Pages

    In “Sonny’s Blues”, by James Baldwin, the author uses the brother’s relationship as a way to highlight suffering, and describe life before salvation. Their dynamic changes, however, when Sonny is introduced to music, as Baldwin uses music to represent redemption. At the same time, the story emphasizes that without suffering, salvation is unnecessary. The story illustrates the turmoil that precedes salvation, the effect salvation can have on people and relationships, and the dependency suffering and salvation have on each other.…

    • 1521 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sonny's Blues

    • 1521 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The writer was a poor boy growing up. He was also a Negro, so things were bad for him and his family in white America. He probably felt sad every day of his childhood so he turned to books for entertainment and maybe escape. When he started reading, he found that he liked it and wanted to create stories for other people to enjoy, but he was a poor Negro boy who could not expect help from the whites, so he taught himself to write. That is similar to Sonny, who taught himself to play the piano.…

    • 1521 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the African American culture, it is very important to embrace your own culture and heritage. If I had to put this whole story in one word, it would be suffering. From the death of the narrator daughter to sonny’s addiction to heroin and the cold-blooded murder of his uncle. The narrator’s father witnessed it himself and it destroyed him for the rest of his life. He was hit by a car full of white people who were too drunk to stop. The narrator’s family suffered a lot. Sonny explains that he uses heroin to escape his problems. Yet from everything he been through, he managed to sing and played the piano beautifully. You can hear that his music comes from dark experiences. the text is also full of anger. the death of his father's brother…

    • 166 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays