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3 - Ellison, photography, and the origins of invisibility

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2006

Ross Posnock
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
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Summary

Among readers of Ellison, it is a truth universally acknowledged that the benchmark for his aesthetics and novelistic style is jazz. His own body of critical writing, as well as received readings of black modernism, insist on a definitive continuity between literature and music, from which visual culture remains at a considerable, historically determined distance. In often-cited essays on such blues and jazz legends as Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, and Charlie Christian; in remembrances of earlier jazz cultures; in the narrative rhythms of Invisible Man (which has been aptly described as ''a progression of jazz breaks taking off from and returning to the bass line of invisibility''): everywhere throughout his work, Ellison asks to be read as an ''ambidextrous'' figure, riffing on jazz and literary histories, thus responding to this American life and forging an authorial identity. Indeed, critic Robert O'Meally has identified jazz in America as ''Ellison's metaphor for democracy and love'' and ''the answer to the complicated question of identity'' in one. Ellison’s work is thus taken to exemplify the apercu that, throughout their history and in response to the social conditions of their emergence, all black arts aspire to the condition of music – most particularly, the high-flying, mind-bending, magisterial flights, the hot dizzy highs and soulful lows, of improvisatory jazz.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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