A master chronicler of the African-American experience, Richard Wright
brilliantly expanded his literary horizons with Pagan Spain,
originally published in 1957. An amalgam of expert travel reportage,
dramatic monologue, and arresting sociological critique, Pagan Spain
serves as a pointed and still-relevant commentary on the grave human
dangers of oppression and governmental corruption.
The Spain Richard Wright visited in the mid-twentieth century was not
the romantic locale of song and story, but a place of tragic beauty and
dangerous contradictions. The portrait he offers in Pagan Spain is a
blistering, powerful, yet scrupulously honest depiction of a land and
people in turmoil, caught in the strangling dual grip of cruel
dictatorship and what Wright saw as an undercurrent of primitive faith.