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Symbolism InBattle Royal, By Ralph Ellison

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In “Battle Royal” by Ralph Ellison, the narrator who remains nameless, is looking back on his teenage years while telling a story from his past. In the story, the narrator is invited to a party to deliver a speech, however when he arrives he is forced to partake in the ‘Battle Royal.’ “Battle Royal is a chapter from Ellison’s book Invisible Man, which is about an African American teenager who grows up in a society where he finds himself ‘invisible,’ as did Ellison himself. In Ralph Ellison’s “Battle Royal,” the American flag tattoo, the blindfold, and the grandfather’s deathbed symbolize the overall message that the African Americans were dominated by the whites.
The narrator of the story is invited to a party, where he is supposed to present his speech in front of all the people who attend. At the party, the white men invite a stripper to intimidate and scare the African American teenagers. The teenagers are forced to stare at the white, blonde, naked woman that stands in front of them, with no way out and not knowing how to react. While recalling the story from his past, the narrator notices that the stripper has a tattoo of the American flag. The American flag is particularly symbolic to this story, since it is placed on a white woman. While being forced to stare at the naked woman at the party, the narrator says, “I wanted at one and the same time to run from the room, to sink through the floor, or go to her and cover her from my eyes and the eyes of the others with my body” (Ellison). Even if they do have feelings for her, they are forbidden to act upon them, since it was illegal to have mixed-race relationships during the 20th century. According to SAGE Publications, “the emergence of racial genomics, I argue, is a response to these specific threats to the racial hierarchy and to white dominance” (Fitzgerald). The white men bring the stripper to the party, mainly to torture the teenagers and make them feel uncomfortable. The white men ‘dominate’ over the African Americans, and therefore feel that it is right to control their every action. Unlike today, where interracial relationships and marriages are accepted, in the 20th century it was even forbidden to look at a woman of the other race.

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