126
Zlatan Filipovic
could be to get rid of this kind of political ‘double bind,’ which is the
simultaneous individualization and totalization of
modern power
structures.
50
Invisibility, in the novel, is a metaphor
of
disclosure of these contradic-
tions and a waste product of the process of subjectivization that calls
for a historical transformation of the subject. The invisible subject is in
every sense an unpresupposable subject, a “singularity without identity,”
in Agamben’s terms,
51
that cannot be thematized by the reductive ty-
pologies of the present, its “proper political classification[s]” (
IM
498),
but that emerges from within its contradictions. In “The Little Man at
Chehaw Station,” Ellison provides a graphic image of an unpresuppos-
able subject that for him suggests “new possibilities of perfection.”
52
Writing against “the ethnic sanctity”
53
and the inherited absolutisms
of racial difference, Ellison is “reminded of a light-skinned, blue-eyed,
Afro-American-featured individual who could have been taken for any-
thing from a sun-tinged white Anglo-Saxon, an Egyptian, or a mixed-
breed American Indian to a strayed member of certain tribes of Jews.”
54
“This young man,” he continues,
appeared one sunny Sunday afternoon on New York’s Riverside
Drive near l51st Street, where he disrupted the visual peace of the
promenading throng by racing up in a shiny new blue volkswagen
Beetle decked out with a gleaming Rolls Royce radiator. As the low
of strollers
came to an abrupt halt, this man of parts emerged from
his carriage… Clad in handsome black riding boots and fawn-colored
riding breeches of English tailoring, he took the curb wielding—with
an ultra-pukka-sahib haughtiness—a leather riding crop. A dashy
dashiki … lowed from his broad shoulders down to the arrogant,
military lare of his breeches-tops, while … a black Homburg hat,
tilted at a jaunty angle, loated majestically
on the crest of his huge
Afro-coiffed head. As though all this were not enough to amaze,
delight, or discombobulate his observers—or precipitate an interna-
tional incident involving charges of a crass invasion of stylistic bound-
aries—he proceeded to unlimber an expensive Japanese single-lens
relex camera, position it atop the ornamental masonry balustrade
which girds Riverside Park in that area, and activate its self-timer.
Then, with
a ballet leap across the walk, he assumed a position be-
side his car … [and] began taking a series of self-portraits… viewed
from a rigid ethno-cultural perspective, neither his features, nor his
car, nor his dress was of a whole. Yet he conducted himself with an
obvious pride of person … inviting all … [to] wonder in response to
himself as his own sign and symbol, his own work of art… And his
essence lay, not in the somewhat comic clashing of styles, but in the
mixture,
the improvised form, the willful juxtaposition of modes.
55