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Barack Obama: Invisible Man

David Samuels has a long and fascinating piece in TNR on how Ralph Ellison explains Barack Obama. It’s hard to sum up or quote, but here’s one interesting paragraph:

It is one of the outstanding ironies of Obama’s story that his political rise has been fueled by a tactical grasp of the same racial logic that condemned Ellison’s invisible man to living in a basement by himself. The blank screen approach that Obama has embraced works well in a moment dominated by the collapse of Wall Street and the Iraq war, issues for which all possible solutions seem unpalatable; what voters want is to feel that things will change, without too much uncomfortable detail about what will actually happen. The fact that the candidate does not make the usual appeal to the authenticity of his personal story makes the usual attacks on him seem nonsensical, regardless of whether or not they are true, a fact that the Clintons lamented during the primary season and John McCain will find equally frustrating during the general election. Crazy right-wing charges that Obama shares the loonier opinions of Dr. Wright or that he is a secret Muslim blend seamlessly into reports of his calls for immediately beginning the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq or his promise to sit down with the leaders of Iran and North Korea without preconditions, or the fact that he began his political career at Bill Ayers’s house in Chicago, or that his financial backer Tony Rezko was a scummy slumlord who paid for the Obamas to have a new backyard. None of it sticks, because Obama is not that kind of candidate. The campaign uses the Ellisonian condition of invisibility to its advantage while also exerting a powerful form of mental jujitsu on guilty white liberals, a species that Obama knows well: Attacks on the candidate are simply projections of the (racist) mentality of his accusers. As they erase the weirder and more specific points of his sensibility in a blizzard of superlatives, whites create an image of a black superman as a kind of photo-negative image of liberal guilt.

And the last 2 sentences:

Barack Obama understands both sides of the global equation that makes America possible, but he has decided that he can’t speak the truth about who he is and what he has seen and what he knows about the world. Obama is the kind of leader we need, which is why it is a shame that he has decided to remain invisible.

  • Brief glimpses into the man, like his excellent race speech addressing the Rev. Wright scandal, his book and personal stories he has told on the msm's biography shows or the bio before his DNC acceptance speech have shown remarkable authenticity and self-awareness though. His game-face is to be implacable and largely invisible, above the fray essentially, but even when he becomes less "invisible" he is quite masterful. There is plenty he's shown of his personal side during this election and the fact that it all reinforces the image of himself that he projects, which is a very powerful one even just through the television, lends nothing but a sense that he's the real deal.

    He works both sides of the coin, using mystique and the high road as well as drawing on his unique story. He seems lofty but more in a "larger than life" sense that many of our most famous presidents have had than the "elitist" tinge his opposition tries to paint him.
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