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Diction In The Invisible Man

Decent Essays

Reading Between and Underneath the Lines: The Invisible Man
Since its publication over half a decade ago, Ralph Ellison’s The Invisible Man has been critically acclaimed for its provocative attempt in translating the African American struggle in the US into a form of a novel. Ellison’s masterful command of language allowed him to tackle extremely sensitive topics such as racism in a seemingly sophisticated yet implicitly subversive manner. The Invisible Man is a bildungsroman—a type of novel that chronicles a character’s moral and psychological growth. Through his effective use of symbolism, syntax and diction, and other literary devices, he weaved a craft that did not only capture people’s attention but started a dialogue on the iniquities that continue to subsist in the society. Hence, this essay will focus on Ellison’s use of these literary techniques and how they facilitated in supporting the moral and psychological …show more content…

The way The Invisible Man expresses his thoughts, his words, his actions, and even those that he does not say or do speaks for itself. Whether in simple sentences or in the complex ones and whether it is delivered formally or casually, the narrator always tells seemingly superficial subjects but a closer look would reveal that he conveys something deeper. For example, in an iconic scene towards the end he said, “Running from the birds to what, I didn't know. I ran. Why was I here at all? “I ran through the night, ran within myself. Ran” (Ellison 412). The way he retold the events that happened before him also appeals as certain yet mysterious, optimistic but distraught, and reflexive although disillusioned. His syntax, diction, and use of the complexities of language help the readers to understand what he is going through and feel with

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