By Stacy Brown NNPA Senior National Correspondent Bill Cosby said his widely criticized admonition that young Black men should “pull their pants up” was less about fashion...

The systemic bias that has historically failed Black people in the USA is no less evident in Canada. That reality is laid bare in the...

Claude Cummings has been unanimously nominated by the NNPA Executive Committee to receive the NNPA 2025 National Leadership Award for outstanding leadership and achievement...

People in the News

Thursday, September 11, 2025

People in the News

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Black history spotlight for Mar. 1, 2013: Ralph Ellison

Ralph Ellison
Image: theatlanticwire.com

Born on Mar. 1, 1914, African American novelist Ralph Ellison originally studied music and sculpture but was drawn into the world of literature as Richard Wright’s protégé.

Ellison spent seven years writing Invisible Man (1952, National Book Award), and although it was his only novel it gained him a place as a respected American writer and remains one of the central texts of the African-American experience.