home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
042594
/
04259929.000
< prev
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-05-26
|
5KB
|
113 lines
<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>