Douglas Field
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Fathers and illness
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Chapter 1 explores Baldwin’s accounts of his stepfather, David Baldwin, a disciplinarian preacher who in the last few years of his life suffered from paranoia and possibly dementia. The chapter weaves recollections of Douglas Field’s father’s illness, which the author uses as a springboard to consider Baldwin’s poignant writing on David Baldwin’s decline, as well as that writer’s transparently autobiographical accounts of this stepfather in early works, among them his first novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain (1953) and his first published short story, ‘The Death of the Prophet’ (1950). The chapter explores how David Baldwin haunts Baldwin’s early work, reflecting on parallels with writing on haunting and hauntology. It examines how Baldwin’s early writing confronted his painful relationship with his stepfather and how much of his fiction from the 1950s explores his burgeoning queer desire against the backdrop of his evangelical upbringing. Reflecting on Baldwin’s complicated relationship to Christianity, the chapter recounts that author’s quest to locate Eugene Worth, a close friend, who committed suicide in the 1940s, and who serves as the basis for the protagonist of his best-selling third novel, Another Country (1962). The chapter concludes by exploring the importance of the painter Beauford Delaney, whom Baldwin referred to as his ‘spiritual father’.

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Walking in the dark

James Baldwin, my father, and me

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