![]() ![]() The issues Ellison so powerfully addresses are those that confront everyone who lives in the modern world: not only racism but the very question of personal identity, our frustrated impulse to assert ourselves in a world which is metaphorically blind. Traveling in the JimCrow car, seeing that the hostile treatment his family receives is in part a consequence of others’ perception of their skin color, the boy begins to understand his place in a racially divisive society.Written in the politically and socially turbulent 1940s, Invisible Man is one of the definitive novels of the African-American experience it is also one of the definitive novels for all Americans. ![]() Her response is defiant: ''she had spat in his face and told him to keep his dirty hands where they belonged'' (13-14). The reader sees the boy first as his mother directs his attention to the fall colors of the passing trees and tells him that Jack Frost ''made the leaves pretty'' and that he ''paints the leaves all the pretty colors.'' This moment of innocence between mother and child contrasts sharply with the anger James witnesses from his mother when ''a butcher had tried to touch her breasts'' (Flying, 13). James, the protagonist of the story, is riding with his mother and brother in a Jim Crow train car away from their home in Oklahoma City to begin a new life after the death of James's father. In his moving story, ''Boy on a Train,'' written approximately fifteen years before the publication of Invisible Man (1952), Ellison portrays through the eyes of an eleven-year-old child the conflict that was to consume him both as an artist and as a cultural critic until his death in 1994: How to represent the distinctiveness of Negro American culture without being consumed by the soul-killing racism endemic to American life. ![]()
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