Battle Royal By Hurston Essay

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The chapter “Battle Royal” from the Invisible Man written by Ralph Ellison has a theme parallel to the poems “Incident” by Countee Cullen and “How it Feels to be a Colored Me” by Zora Hurston. All of these short stories or poems previously listed all contain a theme centered by the narrators facing an eye opening reality to the racial discrimination that surrounds them and how they go on after taking in this inevitable truth. Each narrator is able to recall that very moment of when they discovered their oppression. In Ellison’s first chapter of Invisible Man, the narrator refers to himself as an invisible man because he believes he will never be seen through the white man’s eyes. “It took me a long time and much painful boomerang of my expectations …show more content…

He did not begin to think this way until he had a life altering dream where a white man forced a group of black boys to fight each other ruthlessly in an effort to divide them and make them powerless. “Everyone fought hysterically. It was complete anarchy. Everybody fought everybody else. No group fought for long.” This shows how the oppression of blacks discourages them and stops them striving to achieve their dreams that may seem unrealistic. To parallel Ellison’s work, in Hurston’s poem “How it feels to be a Colored Me” she describes her transition from an all-black town to a city with a predominately white population and how it revealed the way she would be treated in the real world simply because of her skin color. “It seemed that I had suffered a sea change, I was not Zora off Orange County anymore; I was now a little colored girl”. Zora’s innocence was stripped away from her the second she was forced to face the cruel injustices done to those that share the same skin color as her for decades. Although, she does not let this information discourage her as others might. “But I am not tragically colored. There is no great sorrow damned up in my soul, nor lurked behind my

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