People, Locations, Episodes

Thu, 04.09.19149

Ralph Ellison, Author, and Educator born

Ralph W. Ellison

Ralph Ellison was born on this date in 1914. He was a Black author, educator, and one of the most influential writers of the 20th century.

Ralph Waldo Ellison was born in Oklahoma City, attended Douglass H.S., and was a Trumpet student of Zelia Breaux.  After graduation, he was educated at Tuskegee Institute.   After a short-lived first marriage, Ellison married Fanny McConnell in 1946.   His best-known work, "Invisible Man," expounds the theme that American society willfully ignores Blacks.  The novel was one of the first works to describe modern racial problems in the United States from a Black point of view.  It received the National Book Award for fiction in 1953. In his essay collections “Shadow” and “Act and Going to the Territory,” Ellison addressed various aspects of American culture.

He is also noted for many magazine articles and short stories, and during his career, he lectured at many colleges and universities on the subject of black Americans. In 1985, he was among the first National Medal of Arts recipients. At the time of his death, his long-awaited second novel, delayed in part by the destruction of hundreds of pages in a 1967 fire, was left uncompleted. In 1995 (the year after his death), “The Collected Essays of Ralph Ellison” was published.

The following year, his literary executor discovered several of his unpublished stories. Two of them, "Boy on a Train" and "I Did Not Learn Their Names," appeared in The New Yorker magazine in late 1996. “Flying Home and Other Stories,” a collection of Ellison’s stories written between 1937 and 1954, includes six unpublished pieces.

He and his wife were a devoted couple. They lived together in an apartment on Riverside Drive in New York City until Ellison died in April 1994. They had no children. Fanny McConnell Ellison died in 2005 at the age of 93.

To be a Writer

Reference:

Read.gov

Britannica.com

Raph Ellison Foudation.org

The World Book Encyclopedia.
Copyright 1996, World Book, Inc.
ISBN 0-7166-0096-X

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We raise de wheat, Dey gib us de corn: We bake de bread, Dey gib us de crust; We sif de meal, De gib us de huss; We peel de meat, Dey gib us de skin; And... WE RAISE DE WHEAT by Frederick Douglass.
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