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Black And Slaves In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man

Decent Essays

A wise puppet once said: “It’s not easy being green” (“It’s). In the simplest terms Kermit the Frog was saying: it’s not easy being “different.” This is a fact that has held true since the beginning of time: people do not like anyone deemed “different.” From American slavery to the Salem Witch Trials, to the Holocaust, anyone different is inferior. In America, anyone of color is “different.” Because of this African-Americans have been forced to hide the things they like, for fear of being ridiculed for their differences. Becoming comfortable with being different is something black people have had to deal with since their arrival in America. During slavery times, slaves were given the most undesirable cuts of meat like the intestines and feet, while the white masters took the meatiest cuts for themselves. Despite being dealt the worst card, black people persevered and from nothing, created the cuisine known as “soul food” that both blacks and whites eat today. The slaves were forced to plant their own food on tiny plots of land in addition to the work they were doing for their masters. Foods like yams and chitterlings have become staples within the black community, yet many black people are ashamed to eat them. In Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, becoming comfortable with eating yams in the northern public was critical to the Narrator’s realization that he was invisible because he was finally content with his past and with being himself. In the novel, finding the cart

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