The nominee that
would bring greater visibility to profoundly American histories and identities.
The roundtable’s
fourth presenter, Kelley
Wagers of Penn State Worthington Scranton, nominated Ralph Ellison’s Invisible
Man. I don’t imagine I need to say much to introduce Ellison’s novel,
which it’s fair to say is one of the most acclaimed and famous works of 20th
century American literature. But of course acclaim and fame don’t necessarily
equate to actual awareness and engagement, and Kelley made a compelling case
for how a broad national reading of Ellison’s novel would bring greater
visibility to some American stories that deserve and need it.
Kelley focused
on two distinct but interconnected such stories: the histories with which the
novel engages; and the identity to which its narrator connects. On the former, Invisible Man has often been described
as its title character’s metaphorical journey through many of the
complex and crucial stages of African American history, and Kelley argued not
only for the broad relevance of such histories, but for how the novel thus
engages with the balance between individual and national histories to which we
all connect. And on the latter, she noted that the African American men represented
at length in existing Big Read selections are almost all accused criminals,
making Ellison’s protagonist’s far different experiences and identity that much
more worth our attention.
I would agree
with both of those emphases of Kelley’s, and would extend the latter point even
further. In the panel’s discussion portion we talked a lot about the balance between
accessibility and difficulty, between works that engage and works that
challenge, and I can see good arguments on both ends of the spectrum for sure. But
if we compare The Invisible Man to (for example) Mark Twain’s Jim or Harper Lee’s Tom Robinson,
there’s one way in which I would definitely argue for Ellison’s character: his
final line, “Who knows but that, on the lower frequencies, I speak for you?,”
challenges all Americans to consider what connects us, not just as members of a
national fabric but as individuals with a great deal of (often invisible)
common threads. Invisible Man might
help us see the pattern.
Next nominee
tomorrow,
Ben
PS.
Thoughts on this nomination? Other nominees for an Even Bigger Read?
No comments:
Post a Comment