Blueprints: Invisible Man and the Great Migration to White Flight

Myka Tucker-Abramson
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Abstract

Shortly after Ralph Ellison’s protagonist arrives in New York, he encounters Peter Wheatstraw, a man wearing Charlie Chaplin pants, “pushing a cart piled high with rolls of blue paper,” and singing a blues song that reminds the protagonist of home. Often read as a carrier of blues and vernacular traditions within the novel, Wheatstraw is also a literal carrier of building plans, all of which point to the ascendancy of Robert Moses and his New York City Slum Clearance Committee under the aegis of the Federal Housing Act of 1949. This chapter reads Ellison in relation to this emergent regime of post-war planning to suggest we think about Invisible Man not as a novel about a Jim Crow system passing into history, but about the tensions between the emergent racial regime of racial liberalism and white flight out of which neoliberalism would emerge.
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蓝图:看不见的人和向白色飞行的大迁徙
拉尔夫·埃里森(Ralph Ellison)笔下的主人公到达纽约后不久,遇到了彼得·惠特斯特劳(Peter Wheatstraw),一个穿着查理·卓别林(Charlie Chaplin)裤子的男人,“推着一辆堆满蓝色纸张卷的手推车”,唱着一首让主人公想起家乡的蓝调歌曲。在小说中,Wheatstraw通常被解读为蓝调和本土传统的载体,同时也是建筑计划的字面载体,所有这些都表明罗伯特·摩西和他的纽约市贫民窟清理委员会在1949年联邦住房法案的支持下占据了优势。本章将埃里森与战后规划的新兴制度联系起来,建议我们不要把《看不见的人》看作一部关于吉姆·克劳制度成为历史的小说,而是关于新兴的种族自由主义制度与新自由主义将出现的白人逃亡之间的紧张关系。
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