As a 20-year-old black man cramped in a Chicago South Side apartment with his family, Bigger has lived a life defined by the fear and anger he feels toward whites. Bigger is limited by the eighth-grade departure from school, and by the racist real estate practices that forced him to live in poverty. Furthermore, he is subjected to messages from a popular culture that portrays whites as civilized and sophisticated and blacks as barbaric and subservient. Racism has severely reduced Bigger's opportunities in life and even his conception of himself. He is ashamed of his family's poverty and afraid of the whites who control his life--feelings he works hard to keep hidden, even from himself. When these feelings overwhelm him, he reacts with violence. "These were the rhythms of his life: indifference and violence; periods of abstract brooding and periods of intense desire; moments of silence and moments of anger--like water ebbing and flowing from the tug of some far-away, invisible force." (31) Bigger robs people with his friends--though only other blacks, as the gang is too frightened to rob a white man--but his own violence is often directed at these friends as well.
Bigger sees white people as an overpowering and hostile force that is set against him in life. Just as whites fail to conceive of Bigger as an individual,