Book contents
- Ralph Ellison in Context
- Ralph Ellison in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Geographical, Institutional, and Interpersonal Contexts
- Chapter 1 Oklahoma City and “the Territory”
- Chapter 2 Ghosts of Tuskegee
- Chapter 3 Morteza Drexel Sprague
- Chapter 4 New York City, 1936–1946
- Chapter 5 The United States Merchant Marine
- Chapter 6 Fanny Ellison
- Chapter 7 Rome, 1955–1957
- Chapter 8 Postwar New York City
- Chapter 9 Albert Murray after 1962
- Part II Historical, Political, and Cultural Contexts
- Part III Literary and Critical Contexts
- Part IV Reception and Reputation
- Index
Chapter 2 - Ghosts of Tuskegee
from Part I - Geographical, Institutional, and Interpersonal Contexts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2022
- Ralph Ellison in Context
- Ralph Ellison in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Geographical, Institutional, and Interpersonal Contexts
- Chapter 1 Oklahoma City and “the Territory”
- Chapter 2 Ghosts of Tuskegee
- Chapter 3 Morteza Drexel Sprague
- Chapter 4 New York City, 1936–1946
- Chapter 5 The United States Merchant Marine
- Chapter 6 Fanny Ellison
- Chapter 7 Rome, 1955–1957
- Chapter 8 Postwar New York City
- Chapter 9 Albert Murray after 1962
- Part II Historical, Political, and Cultural Contexts
- Part III Literary and Critical Contexts
- Part IV Reception and Reputation
- Index
Summary
While Ralph Ellison was waiting for Invisible Man to be published, he confessed to Albert Murray, that he was haunted by “embarrassing” dreams of “Tuskegee [. . . ] all the scenes of test and judgment.” Although the novel is not an autobiography but “near allegory” as Ellison once called it, critics, while acknowledging the importance of his years at Tuskegee, have tended to flatten the complexity of one of the hero’s greatest “tests” – the Southern black college. Drawing upon biographers Lawrence Jackson and Arnold Rampersad, the Tuskegee University Archives, and Ellison’s own words, his fiction as well his correspondence and interviews, this chapter will explore how large Tuskegee looms in Ellison’s life and work: the Institute meant far more to Ellison’s development as an artist than simply to serve as one more windmill at which the quixotic hero of Invisible Man must tilt.
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- Ralph Ellison in Context , pp. 25 - 33Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021