Malcolm X and Ellison
Interracial sexual desire is depicted both in Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man and The Autobiography of Malcolm X Extreme social stratification and inequalities in social power play an important role in the depiction of interracial sexual desire in both Ellison's book and Malcolm X's autobiography, and also play an important role in the repulsion/attraction dynamic seen between the races. Both of these books leave little hope for humanitarian, loving relationships between the races, as they both often demonize white society. In The Autobiography of Malcolm X, white men who desire black women are clearly manipulative and often racists, while in Ellison's Invisible Man such men are often simply well-meaning but misguided. Malcolm X and Ellison both see white women who desire black men symbolize the white desire to "slum" and the attraction of the women to the stereotype of black men as powerful lovers, while the men who desire white women symbolize the black desire for white power.
Ellison's invisible man tells the story of a young, nameless black man who travels throughout the United States in the mid 1900s. He is expelled from a Southern Negro college for accidentally revealing some of the harsh realities of black life in the southern United States. He moves to New York City, and becomes a spokesman for a social activist group, but retreats from violence and confusion of this life. Throughout the book, the narrator is continually searches for truth and meaning, and is constantly thwarted in this attempt.
Interracial sexual desire in both Ellison's book and Malcolm X's autobiography is played out against a backdrop of extreme social stratification and inequalities in social power. In both books, African-Americans are presented as largely powerless and socially 'inferior' to whites. Racism is prevalent and often rampant, and African-Americans are seen as a lower social class. African-Americans are largely poorer and uneducated in comparison to their white counterparts, and are not afforded the social and political freedoms seen to white. This social stratification often is reinforced by brutally racist acts, such as the blurring of houses, and the beating and hanging of African-American men. Within both books, African-Americans are seen as inferior to whites in the social structure of the time.
The repulsion/attraction dynamic seen in interracial sexual desire in both Ellison's book and Malcolm X's autobiography can be largely understood in the context of social power and social stratification. In the social structure seen in both books, the white social class is seen as powerful and superior, while the black social class is seen as powerless and inferior. As such, any interracial sexual attractions that occur between the social classes are tinged by this social dynamic. Whites would feel that African-Americans were socially inferior, and thus be repulsed by an attraction to this class.
In the Invisible man, the narrator is asked to give his valedictorian speech in front of a number of the town's leading white citizens. He arrives, and is surprised and obliged to watch a naked white woman dance. Here, Ellison clearly demonstrates both the attraction and repulsion that are seen toward white women. The narrator is both "strongly attracted" to the naked woman, and at the same time, "felt a wave of irrational guilt and fear." The narrator notes, "I felt a desire to spit upon her as my eyes brushed slowly over her body." He continues "I wanted at one and the same time to fun from the room, to sink through the floor, or to go to her and cover her from my eyes and the eyes of the others with my body; to feel the soft thighs, to caress her and destroy her, to love her and murder her, to hide from her, and yet to stroke where below the small American flag tattooed upon her belly her thighs formed a capital V" (19).
Part of the narrator's attraction is a natural desire...
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