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Character Development In Invisible Man

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The narrator’s development throughout Invisible Man is one of contradiction, denial, and changing identities. His situation is unique and terrifying as he moves from college in a racist rural town in the south to New York, a relatively diverse metropolis, where he becomes entangled with the Brotherhood and all of its violence, danger, and false equality. The narrative is totally original and incomparable to anything I had ever read before, but the character of the narrator is the complete opposite. Of course he is unique and interesting, but he lacks a concrete identity, he is never even given a name. Yet, the narrator’s invisibility had a relatability that drew me to him and caused me to realize that, based on his development alone, he could …show more content…

Tired of hiding his southern heritage, he goes out and eats yams, another traditionally southern food. As he is eating the yams, the narrator thinks, “I took a bite, finding it as sweet and hot as any I’d ever had, and was overcome with such a surge of homesickness that I turned away to keep my control. I walked along, munching the yam, just as suddenly overcome by an intense feeling of freedom” (264). The narrator lets go of his inhibitions, allowing himself to finally be free to enjoy something that he would not have allowed himself to otherwise due to his prior fear of being seen as lesser because of his southern heritage. While still nowhere near the discovery of himself and his identity that comes at the end of the novel, this scene represents the start of his long road to self discovery. This scene also stood out to me because it was so similar to how I felt when I was around thirteen. I was tired of hiding behind a fake “edgy” persona, so I decided (on a whim, just like the last time) that I would completely change my image, again. I switched Hot Topic for Claire’s, thinking that I could hide my “emo” past with hair bows and sparkly school supplies. While I enjoyed that kind of thing when I was younger, it was not who I was anymore, yet like the narrator, I felt as though the only way to show change was to switch from one extreme to another. If I had to graph how I saw growth, it would look like an incredibly steep sine function, starting at the origin and oscillating as fast as possible between local extrema. I did not want to learn or grow from my past, I wanted to get away from it as fast as I possibly could. Like the Invisible Man, I searched for my identity by hiding it, which I still feel the effects of

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