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Shadow and Act | Themes
Frontier
In his introduction to Shadow and Act, Ellison asserts that as a Negro American born in Oklahoma in post-Civil War America, he is a ‘‘frontiersman.’’ By Ellison’s definition, the American frontier is the territory of the individual, the realm in which, like Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, he is allowed to seek out his destiny, make rash, ‘‘quixotic gestures’’ and approach the world as full of possibility, unhampered by categorical limitations such as race. Ellison attributes this self-image to his childhood in a community rich in diverse...
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- Shadow and Act: Introduction
- Shadow and Act: Summary
- Shadow and Act: Ralph Ellison Biography
- Shadow and Act: Characters
- Shadow and Act: Themes
- Shadow and Act: Style
- Shadow and Act: Historical Context
- Shadow and Act: Critical Overview
- Shadow and Act: Essays and Criticism
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