![]() One of the photographs depicts the book’s nameless narrator in his retreat beneath the city, amid the 1,369 light bulbs that, he tells the reader, “illuminated the blackness of my invisibility.” In Parks’s photograph, the lights are arrayed on the walls behind the figure in a modernist and rhythmic arrangement that reads as an extension of the music emanating from his two turntables (presumably Louis Armstrong, whom the narrator listens to while eating vanilla ice cream and sloe gin). ![]() In 1952, the photographer Gordon Parks worked with Ralph Ellison to translate the writer’s novel, “ Invisible Man,” published earlier that year, into a series of images for Life magazine. to a virtual conversation about “Invisible Man,” to be led by Adam Bradley and held on June 17. This essay is part of T’s Book Club, a series of articles and events dedicated to classic works of American literature. ![]()
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