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  1. "Stranger in the Village" is an essay by African-American novelist James Baldwin about his experiences in Leukerbad, Switzerland, after he nearly suffered a breakdown. The essay was originally published in Harper's Magazine, October 1953, and later in his 1955 collection, Notes of a Native Son.

  2. Stranger in the Village Lyrics. From all available evidence no black man had ever set foot in this tiny Swiss village before I came.

  3. Notes of a Native Son: Stranger in the Village Summary & Analysis. Next. Themes and Colors Key. Summary. Analysis. Baldwin goes to a small village in Switzerland and learns that he is the first black person to ever visit. The village is high in the mountains but not particularly inaccessible.

  4. This essay begins by describing a small village (Leukerbad) in Switzerland where Baldwin stayed in the early 1950s. Before visiting this village, he had not realized that there were places in the world where no one had ever seen a black person.

  5. “Stranger in the Village” is an argumentative essay in which Baldwin makes a compelling case for the uniqueness of race relations in the US. He asserts that the sole way forward is for white people to abandon their illusions of innocence and acknowledge the United States’ mixed racial existence.

  6. Summary: “Stranger in the Village” James Baldwin’s essay, “Stranger in the Village,” examines the author’s experiences in a Swiss village in order to shed light on racism in the United States. Baldwin (1924-1987) was an influential African American essayist, novelist, and short story writer.

  7. Aug 19, 2014 · Stranger in the Village” first appeared in Harper’s Magazine in 1953, and then in the essay collection “Notes of a Native Son,” in 1955. It recounts the experience of being black in an all-white...