Richard Wright was an African-American author whose literary works mainly concerned with racial themes, especially related to how the African Americans suffered the discrimination and violence during the late 19th to mid-20th centuries. In his Native Son, Wright presents an overwhelming racial conflicts between the black and the white through a symbolic murder—Bigger Thomas, a poor young black man, accidentally murders Mary Dalton, a rich white girl. Bigger’s fear of being arrested is soon replaced by a sense of excitement of escaping from the suspicion. Viewing Bigger’s predicament as part of an ongoing historical process is important to the author’s intention: Wright wants to demonstrate how the racial injustice hurts the black as well as the white. My approach to Native Son discusses Bigger’s excitement twofold to understand the racial theme: one is his excitement comes from his manipulation of the social stereotypes of the black to misdirect his murder investigation; the other is how Bigger identifies himself after committing the bloody murders. I apply Frantz Fanon’s concept of black consciousness to analyze how Bigger views himself in the white’s world, and how he from his excitement senses his freedom and creates himself a new identity. Native Son deals with the racial divide in America in which African Americans struggle in the social conditions imposed by the dominant white society. This article provides a meaningful sociocultural context to teachers to examine the society of Native Son and its connection to Bigger’s excitement and his black identity from murders.