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Examples Of Identity Crisis In The Invisible Man

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Introduction

As the word suggests, ‘Identity Crisis’ is a situation of confusion in which a person’s sense of identity becomes insecure due to change in his or her expected dreams or role in the society. The lack of self-judgement and self-actualisation often leads to one’s identity crisis because of his or her failures or incapability to handle success or breaking social norms results into being unacceptable in the society. Our roles in the society and how well we are able to achieve them or adapt to them makes us acceptable in the society as well as recognizable in the society and disrupting such social norms leads to isolation from the society or the people living in that society, thus negatively affecting one’s psychological or mental …show more content…

Wells. The Invisible Man is a science fiction novella, where experiments reach to the stage of identity crisis and isolation from the society for the protagonist of the play, Griffin, who later came to be known as Invisible Man in the play because of his successful experiments of invisibilty.
‘Identity Crisis’ is not just a part of the play but it is actually the consequence of the success achieved by the protagonist of the play on performing his experiments successfully and his incapability to handle the output. The power of ‘Invisibilty’ achieved by him, made him consider himself superior from others living in the same society. This sense of superiority made him behave negatively towards others and considering them to be inferior from him. Eventually, made him carry out certain unacceptable actions in the
Khanna …show more content…

Just as Griffin becomes over-confident and adamant on successfully completing his scientific experiments, people in contemporary society become over-confident and feel extreme proud over their capabilities and similarly as Griffin, are incapable of managing such qualities and success at the very same time.
This mishandling of one’s qualities and directing them towards negativity in search of power or extreme stage of power, people often lose what they actually have in today’s world as well as depicted by Wells in his play. Griffin, not only projects the disturbance at mental or psychological level because of competition towards success, but also depicts what led towards the path of such disturbance and what actually happened as a consequence after it.
This case is not only with Griffin but also with people of contemporary society, who negate societal values to earn wealth and power at extreme levels and are thus, considered socially rejected or unacceptable because of breaking certain acceptable social norms. This disruption of such norms causes the isolation of such people, often depleting their identity as an individual in the society as well as causing identity crisis to an individual. The competition which causes mental stress towards the path of success, not only forms the basis of negative consequences but defines

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