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Social Inequality In Ralph Ellison's Battle Royal

Decent Essays

In “Battle Royal” before the large fight, the party is delighted with a stark nude dancer. Ellison presents the woman in such a way that the reader feels sorry for her just as they do with the narrator. She along with the narrator are both symbols of social inequality experienced before the civil rights movement, where both are abused due to their social niche (the dancer as a woman, and the narrator as an African American). This social inequality is brought forth in an exaggerative way to show that both these things likely occurred in the period, and that they suffer through many other such injustices throughout their normal lives. One of “Battle Royal’s” main purposes was to provide an insight into the pre-Civil Rights era (which was the current time for Ellison) and exemplify the human atrocities that occurred. The short story shows the ways in which the white …show more content…

After all the men had made it into the room “she began to dance, a slow sensuous movement; the smoke of a hundred cigars clinging to her like the thinnest of veils” (522). Her overt sexualization at the hands of the men in the room is easily comparable with the racism directed toward the narrator in the story. Following her dancing she is quickly rushed upon and “tossed her as college boys are tossed at a hazing,” causing “terror and disgust in her eyes” as her “soft breasts seemed to flatten against the air and her legs flung wildly as she spun” (522). The narrator directly compares this terror felt by the woman being manhandled with the terror he is experiencing in leu of the fight and speech. These two extreme examples show how unfairly and disgracefully both woman and African Americans were seen at the time. Only a few generations from the abolishment of slavery, popular culture, especially in the south continued to look down upon these two groups as objects, in a sexual and racial

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