Contributor: Melissa Kowalski. Lesson ID: 12552
Tensions and prejudices have raged among people that are different forever. Many solutions have been offered, but the problems persist. Learn the pros and cons of a movement popular in the 1960s.
Earlier in Invisible Man, the character of Ras the Exhorter is mentioned.
In the chapters you read for this lesson, you will meet Ras and learn more about his social philosophy, Black nationalism, which represents a philosophy different from the narrator's organization.
Read Black Nationalism and the Call for Black Power to learn more about this philosophy that was influential at several points during the twentieth century in the United States.
As you read, answer the following questions in the notebook or journal you have kept for this series.
After reading and answering the questions, check your responses below.
Think about these questions, then read Chapters 15-17 in Invisible Man.
Continue using the copy of the novel in the format you chose to complete this series of Related Lessons (right-hand sidebar). If you do not have access to the novel, you may download Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison from the Internet Archive.
As you read, take notes on the political philosophy of the narrator's organization and the Black nationalist theories of Ras the Exhorter. You will use these notes later in the lesson.
When you have finished reading and taking notes, move to the Got It? section to explore the material of these chapters in more detail.