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Ralph Ellison: Emergence of Genius  
Author: Lawrence Patrick Jackson
ISBN: 0471354147
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
Ralph Ellison (1913-1994) earned his place in the canon of African-American literature in a single act, the publication of Invisible Man (1952). His only completed novel, its controlled fury and modernist polish were thought by many to represent both the vanguard and the future of African-American literature. The book's uniqueness and its influence on subsequent generations have made the absence of an Ellison biography conspicuous; this first study by Jackson, an assistant professor of English at Howard University, ably answers the need. Its greatest limitation is that it ends in 1953, only halfway through Ellison's life. Hence Jackson doesn't discuss the highly anticipated second novel, the manuscript of which was destroyed in a fire in 1967, and which Ellison spent the rest of his life trying to complete. (The fragments were put together by Ellison's executor and published in 2001 as Juneteenth.) Material on Ellison's early years is hard to come by, and readers will find few of the anecdotes, letters or quotations that make up biographers' usual stock-in-trade. Still, these constraints do not seriously detract from the book's real merits. Jackson does a masterful job of re-creating the environments in which Ellison lived: childhood in Jim Crow Oklahoma, education at Tuskegee Institute, coming-of-age in the wake of the Harlem Renaissance. Ellison's intellectual and cultural development is faithfully traced, carefully researched and copiously annotated. Ellison will receive more comprehensive scrutiny in 2003, the projected publication date of acclaimed biographer Arnold Rampersad's authorized treatment. Till then, Jackson's study of the early Ellison does a fine job of shedding light on this enigmatic and revered figure in American letters. Agent, Jenny Bent. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
Unlike his contemporary Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison was slow to make his grand entry into the literary world. But after working for six agonizing years on his best-known novel, Invisible Man, Ellison burst onto the scene to the thunderous acclaim of critics, winning the National Book Award in 1952. Jackson (English, Howard Univ.) traces the development of Ellison's life and work from his boyhood in Oklahoma City through his college days at Tuskegee Institute to his slow but steady rise among New York's intellectual elite in the 1940s and 1950s. Jackson's detailed and exhaustive study adroitly places Ellison in the cultural context that formed him intellectually, offering as well a splendid sketch of the benefits and shortcomings of New York literary life from the 1920s to the 1950s. Unfortunately, Jackson's biography ends in 1953 with the publication of Invisible Man, perpetuating the myth that for the next 40 years Ellison produced nothing of consequence. Jackson's neglect of the brilliant essays in Shadow and Act, Ellison's dazzling and funky writings on music, and the posthumous Juneteenth impoverishes this book. Still, since this is the first and only biography of Ellison now available, its broad contours will suffice until we get the definitive biography. Recommended for most collections. Henry L. Carrigan Jr., Lancaster, PA Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Review
"Professor Lawrence Jackson's painstaking documentation of Ralph Ellison's early life and the beginning of his literary career provides a much needed resource for Ellison's readers and critics." (Horace Porter, author of Jazz Country: Ralph Ellison in America and Director of African Studies at the University of Iowa)

"Lawrence Jackson's absorbing biography of Ralph Ellison makes a vital contribution to American literary history." (Ross Posnock, English Dept., New York University; Author of Color and Culture: Black Writers and the Making of the Modern Intellectual)

"Dr. Lawrence Jackson's remarkable biography of Ralph Ellison is an essential contribution to the scholarship on one of the twentieth century's greatest writers. Painstakingly researched and exhaustive, this compelling portrait of Ellison clarifies his genius--and his intellectual era--for a new century." (Charles Johnson, National Book Award Winner and author of Middle Passage)

"An eloquently written and exquisitely researched biography. There is nothing quite like it. Jackson breathes life into those hidden nooks and crannies of Ellisons youth that would later become cannon fodder for the grown Ellis ons explorations. An utterly ground-breaking biography, the idea of Ralph Ellison will never be the same." (Jerry Watts, Author of Heroism and the Black Intellectual: Ralph Ellison, Politics, and Afro-American Intellectual Life)

Ralph Ellison (1913-1994) earned his place in the canon of African-American literature in a single act, the publication of Invisible Man (1952). His only complete novel, its controlled fury and modernist polish were thought by many to represent both the vanguard and the future of African-American literature. The book's uniqueness-and its influence on subsequent generations-have made the absence of an Ellison biography conspicuous; this first study by Jackson, an assistant professor of English at Howard University, ably answers that need. Its greatest limitation is that it ends in 1953, only halfway through Ellison's life. Hence Jackson doesn't discuss the highly anticipated second novel, the manuscript of which was destroyed in a fire in 1967, and which Ellison spent the rest of his life trying to complete (The fragments were put together by Ellison's executor and published in 1999 as Juneteenth). Material on Ellison's early years is hard to come by, and readers will find few of the anecdotes, letters or quotations that make up biographers' usual stock-in-trade. Still, these constraints do not seriously detract from the book's real merits. Jackson does a masterful job of re-creating the environments in which Ellison lived: childhood in Jim Crow Oklahoma, education at Tuskegee Institute, coming-of-age in the wake of the Harlem Renaissance. Ellison's intellectual and cultural development is faithfully traced, carefully researched and copiously annotated. Ellison will receive more comprehensive scrutiny in 2003, the projected publication of acclaimed biographer Arnold Rampersad's authorized treatment. Till then, Jackson's study of the early Ellison does a fine job of shedding light on this enigmatic and revered figure in American letters. Agent, Jenny.Bent. (Nov.) (Publishers Weekly, September 3, 2001)

Unlike his contemporary Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison was slow to make his grand entry into the literary world. But after working for six agonizing years on his best-know novel, Invisible Man, Ellison burst onto the scene to the thunderous acclaim of critics, winning the National Book Award in 1952. Jackson (English, Howard Univ.) traces the development of Ellison's life and work from his boyhood in Oklahoma City through his college days at Tuskegee Institute to his slow but steady rise among New York's intellectual elite in the 1940s and 1950s. Jackson's detailed and exhaustive study adroitly places Ellison Ellison in the cultural context that formed him intellectually, offering as well a splendid sketch of the benefits and shortcomings of New York literary life from the 1920s to the 1950s. Unfortunately, Jackson's biography ends in 1953 with the publication of Invisible Man, perpetuating the myth for the next 40 years Ellison produced nothing of consequence. Jackson's neglect of the brilliant essays in Shadow and Act, Ellison's dazzling and funky writing on music, and the posthumous Juneteenth impoverishes this book. Still, since this is the first and only biography of Ellison now available, its broad contours will suffice until we get the definite biography. Recommended for most collections. —Henry L. Carrigan, Jr., Lancaster, PA (Library Journal, October 1, 2001)

IF there were ever a pressing need for a biography of a writer, it would be for that of Ralph Ellison, who left a 40-year project unfinished at the time of his death in 1994. When his second novel, "Juneteenth," was published posthumously in 1999, it was described as a book by Ellison, but John F. Callahan makes clear in the introduction that the work is of Ellison but not by him. Ellison wrote thousands of pages of an untitled work, and Callahan extracted, organized and redacted to give the reading public something called, "Juneteenth." If we are to be fair to Ellison we must do our own digging. Enter Lawrence Jackson and his rich, meticulous biography, "Ralph Ellison: Emergence of Genius."Ellison had the saving grace of spirited, proud, ambitious parents who were, in his father's words, "raising this boy up to be a poet." From birth, Ralph Waldo Ellison seemed marked for distinction. Despite oppressive poverty and the deaths of his father and stepfather, his youth was spiritually and culturally rich. Callahan tells us that "for Ellison, geography, history and the human diversity of Oklahoma embodied the actual and potential if oft-denied richness of the country." Compared with the lives of many of his brethren in the South. Ellison's life in Oklahoma was one of intellectual privilege and dignity. The black community was prosperous and sophisticated. The Oklahoma of Ellison's youth, with all its brutalities, was for Ellison a kind of paradise lost. "Oklahoma was the territory of his dreams," Jackson writes. "Oklahoma would form the signal terrain of the novel Ralph Ellison could never bear to finish."The Tuskegee Institute in Macon County, AIa., gave Ellison a music scholarship, thanks to years of mentorship by Zelia N. Breaux, director of the Frederick Douglass Junior and Senior High School Band in Oklahoma City, whose 25 players were "minor celebrities." Ellison was thinking of himself as a musician by the time he was 15 years old. Tuskegee was a bit of a shock for the young Ralph, who had grown up reading Langston Hughes and Countee Cullen during the school day, drinking in jazz by night and listening to church sermons called "God Is Not White" on Sunday. Tuskegee was conservative and compliant, full of classical music and literature, and eschewed jazz and folk art as primitive and lewd. When the nine Scottsboro boys were convicted in 1932, Langston Hughes "was appalled to find few conversations, let alone activism," in the halls of Tuskegee.Even in this restrictive atmosphere, Ellison was able to find mentors - a great gift of his. He was diligent and talented with his trumpet, but he knew he was not gifted enough to make it into the ranks of his idol, Duke Ellington. For him, music was less a calling than simply a way of being in the world. And it was jazz that would largely define his writing style.Jackson's is, curiously, the first biography of Ellison. "Ellison's active involvement in the socialist left of the 1930's and 1940's, the black radical rights movement of the same period and the literary circles around the League of American Writers, New Masses and Partisan Review not only has never been documented before, but has rarely ever been a topic of public intellectual discussion," he writes. Why this absence? According to the cultural critic Stanley Crouch, one of Ellison's literary offspring: "Ellison's impact has come into our national intellectual consciousness very slowly because it had to drill through the rock of pieties - on both the right and the left. He was not easily drafted into movements."Jackson beautifully contextualizes Ellison, whether in Oklahoma, Alabama or New York where he finally fled in 1936, after one imagines, one too many "chapel concerts at evening Vespers." While evoking each of Ellison's environments brilliantly, Jackson, who teaches English at Howard University, also discusses the influence of "The Waste Land" on Ellison's young mind. Importantly for Ellison, the poem combined qualities of jazz and the classics, which for the black Victorians had been unbroachable dichotomies." This kind of cultural and psychological insight makes for a very satisfying counterpart.Ellison had planned to study sculpture for the summer in Harlem, but he never returned to Tuskegee. On his second day in New York, he ran into Alain Locke and Langston Hughes who became his mentor immediately. Hughes introduced Ellison to the high-strung, intellectually demanding Richard Wright and thereby radicalized him. Though Ellison's politics veered, sharply to the left under Wright's influence, he was uncomfortable with the rigidity of Communist theory. Eillison preferred the complex blend of Marx and Freud offered by the cultural critic Kenneth Burke. This impulse toward complications would inform Ellison's art.The biography ends in 1953, following the publication of "Invisible Man," a glorious moment for Ellison after seven years of labor. It is a fitting end for Jackson's book, whose project is to look at the "emergence of genius" rather than the years of triumph and stagnation. (It will be interesting to see the entire trajectory of Ellison's life in Arnold Rampersad's forthcoming biography.) Ellison's life was oddly poetic, the unfinished work itself a metaphor of hope - a vast, fecund, illimitable manuscript that is unwilling to restrict itself to the indelibility of published print. —By Erica Da Costa (The New York Times Book Review, May 26, 2002)

"...the book helped explain a critical period of social and political development and the relationship between black and white cultures..." (Vanity Fair, March 2003)


Review
"Lawrence Jackson's absorbing biography of Ralph Ellison makes a vital contribution to American literary history." --Ross Posnock, English Dept., New York University; Author of Color and Culture: Black Writers and the Making of the Modern Intellectual

"Jackson does a masterful job of re-creating the environments in which Ellison lived...." (Publishers Weekly, September 2001)

"Jacksons detailed and exhaustive study adroitly places Ellison Ellison in the cultural context that formed him intellectually, offering as well a splendid sketch of the benefits and shortcomings of New York literary life from the 1920s to the 1950s." (Library Journal, October 1, 2001)

"Jackson beautifully contextualizes Ellison.... This kind of cultural and psychological insight makes for a very satisfying counterpart." (New YorkTimes Book Review, Sunday, May 26, 2002)

"...the book helped explain a critical period of social and political development and the relationship between black and white cultures..." (Vanity Fair, March 2003)


Review
"An eloquently written and exquisitely researched biography. There is nothing quite like it. Jackson breathes life into those hidden nooks and crannies of Ellisons youth that would later become cannon fodder for the grown Ellisons explorations. An utterly ground-breaking biography, the idea of Ralph Ellison will never be the same." --Jerry Watts, Author of Heroism and the Black Intellectual: Ralph Ellison, Politics, and Afro-American Intellectual Life


Book Description
AUTHOR. INTELLECTUAL. SOCIAL CRITIC. ONE OF THE MOST INFLUENTIAL WRITERS OF ALL TIME. RALPH ELLISON. Praise for Ralph Ellison Emergence of Genius "Dr. Lawrence Jackson’s remarkable biography of Ralph Ellison is an essential contribution to the scholarship on one of the twentieth century’s greatest writers. Painstakingly researched and exhaustive, this compelling portrait of Ellison clarifies his genius––and his intellectual era––for a new century."––Charles Johnson, National Book Award Winner and author of Middle Passage "Lawrence Jackson’s absorbing biography of Ralph Ellison makes a vital contribution to American literary history."––Ross Posnock, English Department, New York University, Author of Color and Culture: Black Writers and the Making of the Modern Intellectual "Professor Lawrence Jackson’s painstaking documentation of Ralph Ellison’s early life and the beginning of his literary career provides a much needed resource for Ellison’s readers and critics."––Horace Porter, author of Jazz Country: Ralph Ellison in America and Director of African Studies at the University of Iowa "An eloquently written and exquisitely researched biography. There is nothing quite like it. Jackson breathes life into those hidden nooks and crannies of Ellison’s youth that would later become cannon fodder for the grown Ellison’s explorations. An utterly groundbreaking biography, the idea of Ralph Ellison will never be the same."––Jerry Watts, author of Heroism and the Black Intellectual: Ralph Ellison, Politics, and Afro-American Intellectual Life


From the Publisher
"Jackson's detailed and exhaustive study adroitly places Ellison Ellison in the cultural context that formed him intellectually, offering as well a splendid sketch of the benefits and shortcomings of New York literary life from the 1920s to the 1950s." (Library Journal, October 1, 2001)


From the Inside Flap
Author, intellectual, and social critic, Ralph Ellison (1914—1994) was a pivotal figure in American literature and history and arguably the father of African American modernism. Universally acclaimed for his first novel, Invisible Man, a masterpiece of modern fiction, and, more recently, for Juneteenth, Ellison was recognized with a stunning succession of honors, including the 1953 National Book Award. Yet, despite rich literary accomplishment and important friendships, political activism, and historical impact, Ellison’s life has never been the subject of a biography. He has received surprisingly sparse treatment by biographers of other leading American literary figures, historians, and social critics. Here, for the first time, is a thoroughly researched biography that tells the coming-of-age story of one of the most gifted and influential writers of our time. Powerfully enhanced by rare photographs of Ellison, this long-deserved examination draws from archives, literary correspondence, and interviews with Ellison’s relatives, friends, and associates. Tracing his path from poverty in Dustbowl Oklahoma to his rise among the literary elite, Lawrence Jackson explores the author’s relationships with other stars, particularly Langston Hughes and Richard Wright, and examines his never-before-documented involvement in the Socialist Left of the 1930s and ’40s, the black radical rights movement of the same period, and the League of American Writers. The result is a fascinating portrait of a fraternal cadre of important black writers and critics––and the singularly complex and intriguing man at its center. The critical success of Invisible Man would bring a flood of honors: the 1955 Prix de Rome from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Medal of Freedom, bestowed by Richard Nixon in 1969, an honorary doctorate from Harvard in 1974, and election to both the National Institute of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Letters. This exceptional biography reveals to readers a man whose mark on an art–– and a people–– has far transcended the trophies bestowed on him.


From the Back Cover
AUTHOR. INTELLECTUAL. SOCIAL CRITIC. ONE OF THE MOST INFLUENTIAL WRITERS OF ALL TIME. RALPH ELLISON. Praise for Ralph Ellison Emergence of Genius "Dr. Lawrence Jackson’s remarkable biography of Ralph Ellison is an essential contribution to the scholarship on one of the twentieth century’s greatest writers. Painstakingly researched and exhaustive, this compelling portrait of Ellison clarifies his genius––and his intellectual era––for a new century."––Charles Johnson, National Book Award Winner and author of Middle Passage "Lawrence Jackson’s absorbing biography of Ralph Ellison makes a vital contribution to American literary history."––Ross Posnock, English Department, New York University, Author of Color and Culture: Black Writers and the Making of the Modern Intellectual "Professor Lawrence Jackson’s painstaking documentation of Ralph Ellison’s early life and the beginning of his literary career provides a much needed resource for Ellison’s readers and critics."––Horace Porter, author of Jazz Country: Ralph Ellison in America and Director of African Studies at the University of Iowa "An eloquently written and exquisitely researched biography. There is nothing quite like it. Jackson breathes life into those hidden nooks and crannies of Ellison’s youth that would later become cannon fodder for the grown Ellison’s explorations. An utterly groundbreaking biography, the idea of Ralph Ellison will never be the same."––Jerry Watts, author of Heroism and the Black Intellectual: Ralph Ellison, Politics, and Afro-American Intellectual Life


About the Author
LAWRENCE JACKSON is Assistant Professor of English at Howard University, where he specializes in African American literature and criticism. He was awarded a Ford Foundation Fellowship and was Resident Fellow at Harvard’s W. E. B. Du Bois Institute while completing this book. Jackson holds a Ph.D. in English and American literature from Stanford University, and an M.A. in English from Ohio State University. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland.




Ralph Ellison: Emergence of Genius

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"Author, intellectual, and social critic, Ralph Ellison (1914-1994) was a pivotal figure in American literature and history and arguably the father of African American modernism. Universally acclaimed for his first novel, Invisible Man, a masterpiece of modern fiction, and, more recently, for Juneteenth, Ellison was recognized with a stunning succession of honors, including the 1953 National Book Award. Yet, despite rich literary accomplishment and important friendships, political activism, and historical impact, Ellison's life has never been the subject of a biography. He has received surprisingly sparse treatment by biographers of other leading American literary figures, historians, and social critics. Here is a thoroughly researched biography that tells the coming-of-age story of one of the most gifted and influential writers of our time." Enhanced by photographs of Ellison, this long-deserved examination draws from archives, literary correspondence, and interviews with Ellison's relatives, friends, and associates. Tracing his path from poverty in Dustbowl Oklahoma to his rise among the literary elite, Lawrence Jackson explores the author's relationships with other stars, particularly Langston Hughes and Richard Wright, and examines his never-before-documented involvement in the Socialist Left of the 1930s and '40s, the black radical rights movement of the same period, and the League of American Writers. The result is a fascinating portrait of a fraternal cadre of important black writers and critics - and the singularly complex and intriguing man at its center.

FROM THE CRITICS

Ross Posnock

Lawrence Jackson's absorbing biography of Ralph Ellison makes a vital contribution to American literary history.

Jerry Watts

An eloquently written and exquisitely researched biography. There is nothing quite like it. Jackson breathes life into those hidden nooks and crannies of Ellison's youth that would later become cannon fodder for the grown Ellison's explorations. An utterly ground-breaking biography, the idea of Ralph Ellison will never be the same.

Publishers Weekly

Ralph Ellison (1913-1994) earned his place in the canon of African-American literature in a single act, the publication of Invisible Man (1952). His only completed novel, its controlled fury and modernist polish were thought by many to represent both the vanguard and the future of African-American literature. The book's uniqueness and its influence on subsequent generations have made the absence of an Ellison biography conspicuous; this first study by Jackson, an assistant professor of English at Howard University, ably answers the need. Its greatest limitation is that it ends in 1953, only halfway through Ellison's life. Hence Jackson doesn't discuss the highly anticipated second novel, the manuscript of which was destroyed in a fire in 1967, and which Ellison spent the rest of his life trying to complete. (The fragments were put together by Ellison's executor and published in 2001 as Juneteenth.) Material on Ellison's early years is hard to come by, and readers will find few of the anecdotes, letters or quotations that make up biographers' usual stock-in-trade. Still, these constraints do not seriously detract from the book's real merits. Jackson does a masterful job of re-creating the environments in which Ellison lived: childhood in Jim Crow Oklahoma, education at Tuskegee Institute, coming-of-age in the wake of the Harlem Renaissance. Ellison's intellectual and cultural development is faithfully traced, carefully researched and copiously annotated. Ellison will receive more comprehensive scrutiny in 2003, the projected publication date of acclaimed biographer Arnold Rampersad's authorized treatment. Till then, Jackson's study of the early Ellison does a fine job of shedding light onthis enigmatic and revered figure in American letters. Agent, Jenny Bent. (Nov.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Unlike his contemporary Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison was slow to make his grand entry into the literary world. But after working for six agonizing years on his best-known novel, Invisible Man, Ellison burst onto the scene to the thunderous acclaim of critics, winning the National Book Award in 1952. Jackson (English, Howard Univ.) traces the development of Ellison's life and work from his boyhood in Oklahoma City through his college days at Tuskegee Institute to his slow but steady rise among New York's intellectual elite in the 1940s and 1950s. Jackson's detailed and exhaustive study adroitly places Ellison in the cultural context that formed him intellectually, offering as well a splendid sketch of the benefits and shortcomings of New York literary life from the 1920s to the 1950s. Unfortunately, Jackson's biography ends in 1953 with the publication of Invisible Man, perpetuating the myth that for the next 40 years Ellison produced nothing of consequence. Jackson's neglect of the brilliant essays in Shadow and Act, Ellison's dazzling and funky writings on music, and the posthumous Juneteenth impoverishes this book. Still, since this is the first and only biography of Ellison now available, its broad contours will suffice until we get the definitive biography. Recommended for most collections. Henry L. Carrigan Jr., Lancaster, PA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Painstaking biography covering the first half of the noted African-American writer's life, through his acceptance of the National Book Award in 1953. Ellison (1914-94) grew up in Oklahoma City. His beloved father died when Ralph was three; thereafter he shuttled from address to address with his mother, whose ferocious self-respect made both employment and housing opportunities precarious. The intelligent boy's struggles with poverty and racial strife were mitigated by exposure to a good library, a visionary music teacher, and exceptional local jazz. Later, he won a scholarship from Tuskegee Institute's prestigious music school to study trumpet and conducting. The need for money led him in 1936 to New York, where he was introduced to Langston Hughes and within weeks had shifted his orientation to literature and left-wing politics. With Hughes as his mentor, Ellison launched himself in literary and political circles both up- and downtown. He served as editor of The Negro Quarterly and consolidated his reputation as a critic with his advocacy of Richard Wright's Native Son. Jackson (English/Howard Univ.) illuminates the complicated ways in which Ellison's career was shaped by his relationship with Wright, with whom he shared a rural background, modernist tastes, and an ambivalent relationship with the Communist Party, and whose success spurred Ellison's desire to write fiction. After WWII, his second wife Fanny's income and companionship allowed him to concentrate on the protean novel that eventually became Invisible Man, the masterpiece that catapulted him to fame in 1952. Jackson's scholarship is thorough, his insights valuable, but his prose, marred by idiomatic blunders and muddysentence structure, is only just adequate to convey the complex temperament of his subject. Ambitious, original, dedicated, and lucky, Ellison seems at once isolated from and excessively dependent on his professional milieu; despite the biographer's emphasis on effort and integrity rewarded, sadness and desperation haunt this life. Gracelessly written, but indispensable to students of Ellison, Oklahoma City in the 1920s, or Harlem in the '40s.

     



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