Preview

Theme in Battle Royal

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
817 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Theme in Battle Royal
Cassandra Morgan
English 110
October 12th 2012
Themes in Battle Royal
“Battle Royal” by Ralph Ellison is about a nameless protagonist young African American who struggles to find his place in society. Ellison doesn’t provided a statistics or facts about racial discrimination instead Ellison uses imagery and satire that allows readers to step into the horrific experiences of the young man described in the story. More importantly, Ellison uses the key events of “Battle Royal” to satirically show real cultural issues affecting African American society throughout history. The major theme in Battle Royal is racism, an underlying theme is identity. Early in the story we learn a few things about the main character for example he is graduating from high school, also that he is an excellent speaker and that he is invited to read his speech in an all white men’s club. At this time the young man believes in the accommodations philosophy for his race “I visualized myself as a potential Booker T. Washington” (128). The main character speech is about humility and how by using humility improvement will be made. The protagonist arrives at the club ready to deliver his speech to the audience but when he arrived he was asked to participate in other activities. A boxing match or a Battle Royal is arranged and he is told to participate. The main character wasn’t the only one there, 9 other African American participated in this match as well.
During the event important men from the community there were drinking and smoking cigars. In the scene a naked beautiful white woman appears and begins to dance in front of the 10 fighters the main characters feels confuse about how he should react to the scene “My teeth chattered, my skin turned to goose flesh, knees knocked. Yet I was strongly attracted and looked in spite of myself ”(129). As she dance the white men riled the fighters “Some threatened us if we looked and others if we did not. On my right I saw a boy faint” (129).

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Similar to Swift, he opted for the more vivid description of injustice that was being experienced. One example from his story Battle Royal is the repeated use of a racial slur meant in a derogatory manner (Ellison 368). Also, one of the boys was purposefully tossed on to the electric rug, causing him to spasm from the electricity, but the laughter from the White men continued (Ellison 368). This act of deliberate cruelty represents the mindset of most southern Caucasian during this time period. It also represents how little respect they held for the race they considered inferior. Another uncomfortable scene includes the brutality the narrator experienced in the ring while fighting (365-366). He merely wanted to present his speech, but is now being humiliated and forced to…

    • 571 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As for Ellison's "Battle Royale " , the title itself conveys that there is a battle between the black and the white people and tells that this battle is of the long kind .He says in the story that it may stay for centuries . The grandfather's scenes at the beginning and at the end of the story emphasize that this long battle is inherited from ancestors to descendents . The narrator of the story sets imagery about himself . He calls himself invisible to declare that he is neglected . No one sees him to let him get his rights and to be dealt with as equal as the white men . Animal imagery is used in the battle scene to represent how…

    • 588 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the story" Battle Royal", the unnamed narrator believes that genuine obedient will bring him respect and praise from the white men. The reality is opposite to his thought. The white men took advantage of his passivity, forcing him to participate in the barbaric and disorganized battle royal with his 9 black schoolmates. They were blindfolded and pummeled each other viciously to entertain the tipsy and drunk white men who kept yelling. When the unnamed narrator raised his gloved hands to push the layers of white aside voice yelled, "Oh, no you don't! Black bastard! Leave that alone!" (Ellison, 1952, p.288).…

    • 1137 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Battle Royal Discussed

    • 1020 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Ralph Ellison’s “Battle Royal” is about how when he was a young African American male he was asked to attend a gathering of the elite white males of society to reiterate a graduation speech he had given at his own graduation. Upon going to the gathering the young boy is face with the games the white men insist he take part in with others of his same race, which the main game is the “Battle Royal” (1043 ). After being forced to take part in some demeaning games the young man, Mr. Ellison himself, is then asked to give his speech that was about how African Americans should act with in society. Upon giving his speech again he begins to awaken to the truth about racial equality, segregation, and humbleness. At first glance one might take this story as a random glimpse into racism of the early 19th century endured by a young boy, but that young man represents black Americans as a whole and the inner battle of how to overcome the suppression of racism and still be true to who they are without becoming invisible in a white man’s society.…

    • 1020 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ralph Ellison begins the short story, “Battle Royal”, in some what of a state of confusion. The nameless narrator informs the reader that he has been essentially lost in the early twenty years of his life. The narrator’s grandfather adds to his confusion and the overall purpose of the story. While on his death bed, the grandfather claims to be a traitor and a spy. He charges his family to “overcome ‘em with yeses“(258, paragraph 2) and “undermine ‘em with grins”(258, paragraph 2) as he lays preparing for death. A point that the narrator subconsciously internalized, the reader sees through the series of actions and point of view of the narrator the use of role playing among blacks. For if this method is followed, blacks…

    • 898 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Battle Royal is the first chapter in a novel called "The Invisible Man." "Ralph Ellison," who lived 1914 - 1994, based this novel on the life of a young black man, the narrator, living in the world of cruel racism. The narrator's life was a fine example of racism. The white people, in this story, are merciless and malicious. Ellison's definition of racism incorporates a high degree of cruelty; he tells how white people take pleasure in being cruel to the black folk, especially in the fight scene.…

    • 550 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Then he begins to recollect and tell his story, starting with the first speech he ever gave to a large audience. Before he gets the chance to speak he is told he must take part in a battle royale in which he and many other black men are blindfolded an tossed into a ring then told to fight brutally. Once the battle ends they are then forced to cross an electric rug to pick up the money that was promised to them, he is then allowed to give his speech with a mouth full of blood and body sore with bruises.…

    • 2168 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Ralph Ellison’s, “Battle Royal” the protagonist is the narrator and the main character. He delivers the story to the reader in the form of a first person narrative. The narrator although black perceives himself as better than those of his race. His personality and the attitudes he exudes is exceedingly confident, blatantly arrogant and prideful. The reader is aware of this elevated sense of pride by observing the narrator’s actions/interactions with others and his thoughts.…

    • 926 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Battle Royal Thesis

    • 588 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Ralph Ellison’s “Battle Royal” (rpt. In Michael Meyer, The Bedford Introduction to Literature, 9th ed. [Boston: Bedford, 2011] 277) is a short story about realization and blindness. It is the first chapter from “Invisible Man” (1952) which was his only published book and won him the National Book Award in 1953. It’s about pleasing others to belong to a group and fighting to get to the top. It’s also about the narrator wanting to please the very people who looked at him as an inferior race through his determination, well educated, and bravery.…

    • 588 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In this event, the narrator and several of his classmates must fight blindfolded until only one person remains standing. While the drunken crowd of respected bankers, lawyers, judges, doctors, and even a pastor finds this to be great entertainment, to the participants it is quite humiliating and degrading. Eventually the narrator and one other man are left alone in the ring. The narrator offers to let the other man win, but the request is refused. Therefore, the two continue to fight until the narrator eventually loses. The fact that grown, respected man can watch and be entertained by this barbaric behavior. I believe that these young men were placed on display for these influential white men. These young men were used to amuse them for one night. It is as if these influential white men were watching two chickens go at it or two dogs fighting. Those young men may have been black but they were still men, human. How can we as a society accept or condom this type of behavior? Who draws the line? I suppose at that time these influential men did and that is why to this day we as a society are fighting to regress from our past and to remember as President Lincoln stated "Men are created equal . . .…

    • 944 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Battle Royal Symbolism

    • 884 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The short story “Battle Royal,” written by Ralph Ellison, has a lot of symbolic meanings. It’s about a young African American teenager who had just graduated from High School, and his grandfather had also recently died. He was invited to give his graduation speech in front of a group of white men. He arrived and was told to participate in the battle royal that was to take place as entertainment for the audience. Before the fight started a nude dancer was put in the ring as a distraction. She was mistreated and thrown about the room violently. The boys were blindfolded and told to go at it. The young teen and one other boy were the only two left in the ring, but the other boy won. After the fight there was a rug with money on it to pay the boys…

    • 884 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Reyita

    • 904 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Reyita explains how a black mans best or even only chance was in sports, especially boxing. It was almost impossible for black men to escape poverty at that time.…

    • 904 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Ralph Ellison's Battle Royal provides a realistic perspective of a Negro man striving to live in a nation dominated by white supremacy. The story speaks of the conflicts between the white and blacks as well as the conflicts that arise within the narrator and himself. Battle Royal resembles a black man’s place in society, the American Dream, and the use of symbolism to convey this thought. Ellison uses symbols and imagery to engage the readers by bringing them to a time period in history where social equality frowned upon.…

    • 1219 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Weighing In Essay

    • 1319 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Racism has repeatedly played a controversial role throughout the course of history. This is a topic fueled by the heated arguments of the parties on both ends of the matter, may it be the cry of the victim or defense of the offender. As described in the works of two members of ethnic minorities coping with the alienation they both faced in what is supposed to be the land of diversity, Firoozeh Dumas’ “The F Word,” and Brent Staples’ “Black Men and Public Space, racism is portrayed as a dark shadow cast upon those who may not seem to conform to the “norms” of western culture to the typical American. Such stereotypes and predispositions should not hold the power to classify and simplify human beings to one single standard of a certain background, as one single story or idea does not define an entire mass of people.…

    • 1319 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the short story, “Battle Royal”, Ralph Ellison uncovers a boy’s fight to maintain his dignity in a world of racial injustice. The first person narration portrays a naïve view of the boy’s values of what he believes is important in life that is only questioned by his grandpa’s firm conviction of dignity. On page 39, starting with paragraph 99, the text depicts the differences between the two segregated worlds of black and white.…

    • 933 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays