Jr. Baker’s analysis of 20th century African American novelist Ralph Ellison begins by portraying the degree to which the latter regards African folklore to be fact, or at least, reality. The ephemeral joy, the eternal fury, and the wretched gloom of the human project all have reflections in art, or more specifically, African fiction. These sentiments are intertwined in the lived experience. With this established, Ellison then critiques how fiction deviates from reality: a distorted history. A tale applauded by whites as well as documentation for the criminalization of blacks. In his piece Invisible Man, Ellison’s reality is the African American experience that deviates from social, ideal, and political spheres. It is a history of the future: …show more content…
The black phallus is a symbol of the burdens of the race, a part of a ritual that is scorned by the melanin deficient. The black phallus, then, is vulnerable in a phallocentric society, a society that is formed and controlled by the phallus. It is a symbol of unconstrained force envied and feared by white men and condemned - castrated. Trueblood makes the symbol part of a royal paternity: of gods and monsters, constructing the clan itself. Possession of a phallus makes the beholder a creator, a god, unbound by rules and regulations. The entropy that surrounds incest, as a social catastrophe, does not touch him. He survives and he prospers. Phallus grants the power of dominance: of incest, of rape, of murder. The phallic trickster must be considered: it is a force that does such rape and killing, but also serves as a benevolent god that gives life. Trueblood is a trickster that cannot hold in his phallic energy, he must purge this power or he will unravel. Women, however, take on a corrupting energy. They are agents of vendetta and certification. They condemn him, though the society applauds him. Her fertile womb makes her a mother who seeks justice but is also bound by the power of his phallus. Trueblood escapes persecution in culture: blues. Blues offer a vent to purge sin, to consolidate it. On the whole, Trueblood, faced with a catastrophe that should mortify and redefine himself, shall not be