Black Folklore as a Psychological Development in Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man Characters
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
The previous century’s concern in African American literature was
about the quest for identity, self-awareness and a sense of being.
Identity had known as a continuing development and had tempted
many artists such as Richard Wright, W. E. B. Du Bois and Ralph
Ellison. During Harlem Renaissance, the Blacks were seduced by the
identity construction and showed their pride of their being and
belonging to African roots. The present study has an analytical nature
which examines the psychological development of the Ralph Ellison’s
Invisible Man characters and the use of Black aesthetics as a means of
expressing the self. It also explores the blacks’ identity and their
experience through the analysis of the novel and aims to investigate
the pivotal events and the major characters as well as their progression
in the novel, so that the reader can learn the issues related to the
characters’ life