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- <text id=94TT0449>
- <title>
- Apr. 25, 1994: Invincible Man
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- OBITUARY, Page 90
- Invincible Man
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>RALPH ELLISON 1914-1994
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <p> The words still seep into the reader's marrow, 42 years after
- they were first published. "I am an invisible man," Ralph Ellison
- declared in the opening sentence of his only novel. "I am invisible,
- understand, simply because people refuse to see me." If they
- do register his presence, it is as "a figure in a nightmare
- which the sleeper tries with all his strength to destroy."
- </p>
- <p> Invisible Man, in which a young black relates the surreal events
- leading to his ultimate isolation, earned best-novel-of-its-time
- raves from the college of critics. It established Ellison in
- the permanent firmament of American writers, a place he still
- occupied at his death last week from pancreatic cancer, six
- weeks after his 80th birthday. But Invisible Man was more than
- a gorgeously written piece of fiction. Because its phantasmagoric
- satire of mid-century life in Harlem and the American South
- proved prophetic, the book became a blueprint for inner-city
- discontent. Invisible Man taught two generations of readers,
- black and white, how to think about themselves.
- </p>
- <p> If they had read more carefully, it might also have taught them
- to think for themselves. For this is not a self-help or self-hate
- book; it is a plea for common survival. It posed Rodney King's
- plea more subtly but no less potently: Can we all get along?
- </p>
- <p> Most of the time, the dapper Ellison got along with blacks and
- whites. He was the precocious child of doting parents in Oklahoma
- City. "I'm raising this boy to be a poet," said Ellison's father,
- a small businessman who named him after Ralph Waldo Emerson
- and died when the child was three. Ralph's mother worked as
- a domestic and recruited blacks for the Socialist Party. There
- was no shortage of role models for Ralph; he attended a grammar
- school named for Frederick Douglass and won a scholarship to
- Booker T. Washington's Tuskegee Institute. While in the Merchant
- Marines during World War II, he published several short stories.
- One day, just after the war, he found himself typing, "I am
- an invisible man." He spent seven years developing that sentence
- into the work that brought him instant fame.
- </p>
- <p> Shuttling boldly between fable and philosophy, Invisible Man
- is the story of a Candide of color. Down home, our unnamed hero
- is given a scholarship by the white gentry, then forced by these
- same burghers to fight other blacks blindfolded. Up North, he
- works in a paint factory; its metaphorical function is to whitewash
- the American experience into the American dream. He is the guinea
- pig of medical sadists and firebrand communists. He is the wary
- friend of "Ras the Destroyer," a prototype of black militancy.
- </p>
- <p> It is the burden of a pioneer to be the presumed spokesman for
- all "his people." Ellison, a sensible gent, declined this honor.
- He was not every black writer; he was a black writer--or,
- as he might prefer, a writer. And, for some blacks, he was guilty
- of having allowed himself to be praised by white critics. In
- the '60s, when the civil rights sing-along gave way to Black
- Power shock therapy, Ellison found himself overshadowed by more
- urgent novelists, such as Richard Wright (Native Son), who played
- Malcolm X to Ellison's Martin Luther King Jr. Ellison compiled
- two volumes of trenchant essays but never finished his second
- novel, on which he worked for four decades. Joe Fox, his editor
- at Random House, says he was told neither the book's subject
- nor its title, only that it was "virtually finished." Fanny
- Ellison, Ralph's wife of 47 years, may know how close he came
- to completing the novel. But it is possible that he worried
- over it so long because he felt that changing fashion had made
- his complex take on race antique.
- </p>
- <p> The unfashionable fact is that Ellison's writing was too refined,
- elaborate, to be spray painted on a tenement wall. He was a
- celebrator as much as a denouncer of the nation that bred him.
- In his multicolored vision, America was not just a violent jungle
- but a vibrant jumble of many cultures and temperaments; it mingled
- melody, harmony, dissonance and ad-lib genius, like the jazz
- that Ellison played, wrote about and loved.
- </p>
- <p> Today's music is more anarchic--a rap on the thick skull of
- an oppressive society--and the street mood is rancid, desperate.
- It makes one wonder if Ellison's message ever got through to
- the larger public. As he declared in his 1963 essay "The World
- and the Jug," he wrote not from a belief that blacks can only
- suffer and rage, but from "an American Negro tradition which
- teaches one to deflect racial provocation and to master and
- contain pain. It is a tradition which abhors as obscene any
- trading on one's own anguish for gain and sympathy; which springs
- not from a desire to deny the harshness of existence but from
- a will to deal with it as men at their best have always done."
- </p>
- <p> Through his writing, Ralph Ellison hoped to breed a race of
- heroes. Through his example, he was surely one of them.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-