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Ralph Ellison

Ralph Ellison
Born March 1, 1914(1914-03-01)[1]
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States
Died April 16, 1994 (aged 80)
New York, New York, United States
Occupation Novelist, Essayist, Short story writer
Genres Fiction, Short Stories, Criticism
Notable work(s) Invisible Man

Influences[show]Hemingway, Emerson, James Joyce, Thoreau, Whitman, Louis Armstrong, Richard Wright, Twain, Faulkner, Henry James, T. S. Eliot, Dostoevsky

Ralph Waldo Ellison (March 1, 1914[1] – April 16, 1994) was a novelist, literary critic, scholar and writer. He was born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Ellison is best known for his novel Invisible Man (ISBN 0-679-60139-2), which won the National Book Award in 1953. He also wrote Shadow and Act (1964), a collection of political, social and critical essays, and Going to the Territory (1986). Research by Lawrence Jackson, one of Ellison's biographers, has established that he was born a year earlier than had been previously thought.

Rallph Ellison was born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma to Lewis Alfred Ellison and Ida Millsap. He had one brother named Herbert Millsap Ellison, who was born in 1916. Lewis Alfred Ellison, a small-business owner and a construction foreman, died when Ralph was three years old. Many years later, Ellison would find out that his father hoped he would grow up to be a poet.

In 1933,Ellison entered the Tuskegee Institute on a scholarship to study music. Tuskegee's music department was perhaps the most renowned department at the school, headed by the conductor Charles L. Dawson. Ellison also had the good fortune to come under the close tutelage of the piano instructor Hazel Harrison. While he studied music primarily in his classes, he spent increasing amounts of time in the library, reading up on modernist classics. He specifically cited reading The Waste Land as a major awakening moment for him.

After his third year, Ellison moved to New York City to earn money for his final year. He decided to study sculpture and he made acquaintance with the artist Romare Bearden. Perhaps Ellison's most important contact would be with the author Richard Wright, with whom he would have a long and complicated relationship. After Ellison wrote a book review for Wright, Wright encouraged Ellison to pursue a career in writing, specifically fiction. The first published story written by Ellison was a short story entitled "Hymie's Bull," a story inspired by Ellison's hoboing on a train with his uncle to get to Tuskegee. From 1937 to 1944 Ellison had over twenty book reviews as well as short stories and articles published in magazines such as New Challenge and New Masses.

Contents [hide]
1 Writing career
2 Final years
3 Notes
4 Sources
5 External links

[edit] Writing career
During World War II, Ellison joined the Merchant Marine, and in 1946 he married his second wife, Fanny McConnell. She worked as a photographer to help sustain Ellison. From 1947 to 1951 he earned some money writing book reviews, but spent most of his time working on Invisible Man. Fanny also helped type Ellison's longhand text and assisted her husband in editing the typescript as it progressed.

Invisible Man explores the theme of man’s search for his identity and place in society, as seen from the perspective of an unnamed black man in the New York City of the 1940s. In contrast to his contemporaries such as Richard Wright and James Baldwin, Ellison created characters that are dispassionate, educated, articulate and self-aware. Through the protagonist, Ellison explores the contrasts between the Northern and Southern varieties of racism and their alienating effect. The narrator is "invisible" in a figurative sense, in that "people refuse to see" him, and also experiences a kind of dissociation. The novel, with its treatment of taboo issues such as incest, won the National Book Award in 1953.

In 1955, Ellison went abroad to Europe to travel and lecture before settling for a time in Rome, Italy, where he wrote an essay that appeared in a Bantam anthology called A New Southern Harvest in 1957. In 1958, he returned to the United States to take a position teaching American & Russian literature at Bard College and to begin a second novel, Juneteenth. During the 1950s he corresponded with his lifelong friend, the writer Albert Murray. In these letters they commented on the development of their careers, the civil rights movement and other common interests including jazz. Much of this material was published in the collection Trading Twelves (2000).

In 1964, Ellison published Shadow and Act, a collection of essays, and began to teach at Rutgers University and Yale University, and continued to work on his novel. The following year, a survey of 200 prominent literary figures was released that proclaimed Invisible Man as the most important novel since World War II.

In 1967, Ellison experienced a major house fire at his home in Plainfield, Massachusetts, in which he claimed more than 300 pages of his second novel manuscript were lost. This assertion is challenged in the 2007 biography of Ellison by Arnold Rampersad. A perfectionist regarding the art of the novel, Ellison had said in accepting his National Book Award for Invisible Man, that he felt he had made "an attempt at a major novel", and despite the award, he was unsatisfied with the book. Ellison ultimately wrote over 2000 pages of this second novel. He never finished.

Writing essays about both the black experience and his love for jazz music, Ellison continued to receive major awards for his work. In 1969 he received the Medal of Freedom; the following year, he was made a Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by France and became a permanent member of the faculty at New York University as the Albert Schweitzer Professor of Humanities, acting from 1970–1980.

In 1975, Ellison was elected to the The American Academy of Arts and Letters and his hometown of Oklahoma City honored him with the dedication of the Ralph Waldo Ellison Library. Continuing to teach, Ellison published mostly essays, and in 1984, he received the New York City College's Langston Hughes Medal. In 1985, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts. In 1986, his Going to the Territory was published. This is a collection of seventeen essays that included insight into southern novelist William Faulkner and his friend Richard Wright, as well as the music of Duke Ellington and the contributions of African Americans to America’s national identity.

[edit] Final years
In 1992, at age 79, Ellison was awarded a special achievement award from the Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards. Ellison was also an accomplished sculptor, musician, photographer and college professor. He taught at Bard College, Rutgers University, the University of Chicago, and New York University. Ellison was also a charter member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers.

Ralph Ellison died on April 16, 1994 of pancreatic cancer, and was buried in the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York City. He was survived by his wife Fanny Ellison, who died November 19, 2005.

After his death, more manuscripts were discovered in his home, resulting in the publication of Flying Home: And Other Stories in 1996. In 1999, five years after his death, Ellison's second novel, Juneteenth (ISBN 0-394-46457-5), was published under the editorship of John F. Callahan, a professor at Lewis & Clark College and Ellison's literary executor. It was a 368-page condensation of over 2000 pages written by Ellison over a period of forty years. All the manuscripts of this incomplete novel was published on January 26, 2010 by Modern Library, under the title, Three Days Before the Shooting.[2]

[edit] Notes
1.^ a b Ellison's birthday has been listed as either 1913 or 1914 by various reputable sources.
2.^ "Three Days Before The Shooting...". Random House. http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9781588360892. Retrieved Jan. 26, 2010.
[edit] Sources
Lifetime Honors - National Medal of Arts
Going to the Territory by Ralph Ellison
[edit] External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Ralph Ellison

Literary Encyclopedia Biography
Literary Encyclopedia, Invisible Man
Ralph Ellison: an American Journey a documentary from California Newsreel
Soul of a People: Writing America's Story a 90-minute documentary about the WPA Writers' Project
Biography
PBS
The Paris Review Interview
Notes on Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man
Saul Bellow's 1952 Review of Invisible Man
Shadowing Ralph Ellison by John Wright
Photos of the first edition of Invisible Man
Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture - Ellison, Ralph
Persondata
NAME Ellison, Ralph Waldo
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Ellison, Ralph
SHORT DESCRIPTION 20th century American writer
DATE OF BIRTH March 1, 1913
PLACE OF BIRTH Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States
DATE OF DEATH April 16, 1994
PLACE OF DEATH New York, New York, U.S.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Ellison"
Categories: 1994 deaths | American essayists | American novelists | American music critics | African American writers | African American essayists | African American novelists | Deaths from pancreatic cancer | United States National Medal of Arts recipients | Writers from Oklahoma | Writers from New York | National Book Award winners | People from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma | Tuskegee University alumni | Cancer deaths in New York | Bard College faculty | 1913 birthsViews
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