Answer:
Wright's cultural perspective helps him understand the difficulties his father faced throughout life.
Step-by-step explanation:
Black Boy is the autobiography of the narrator Richard Wright about his childhood, growing up in the South amidst the racial prejudice and his life getting education and his adult life in Chicago. He recounts his lief of turbulent times with his relationship with his father and the hatred he has for him, but at the same time deciding to forgive the man he has as a father.
The given excerpt is from the end of chapter 10, after Wright had went to meet his father after a "quarter of a century" from when he last saw him. He saw how similar they are, even though he may have hated his father the whole time. He realized that the cultural circumstances may have had a hand in what he did when he did. Wright decided to forgive his father, for he believes and now understands that the societal and cultural circumstances his father may have gone through that time. He understands the difficulties he may have faced throughout his life, which probably led him act the way he did.