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Finding Identity In Ralph Ellison's The Invisible Man

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The Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison deals with the identity of a black man in a white America. The character decides that the world is full of blind people that cannot see him for who he really is, therefore he calls himself the invisible man. Although he is truly not invisible, it represents other people not wanting to look at him and pay attention to him. The novel takes us through a first person point of view with the invisible man. Throughout the novel the invisible man encounters the phenomenon of being invisible and struggles to find his own identity in society, and determines that it is impossible. The novel starts out with the prologue, which is a very powerful opening to the book. “I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me” (Ellison p. 3). This quote suggests that people can see the narrator but that they choose to not see him, most likely because of his race. “It is sometimes advantageous to be unseen”(Ellison p. 3). The narrator is confused on whether or not he wants to be invisible or whether he wants to be seen in society. The narrator is struggling to find his identity even in the prologue, being invisible has its advantages and …show more content…

“For three years I had thought of myself as a man and here with a few words he’d made me as helpless as an infant” (Ellison p. 147). The narrator goes to college to try to get an education and meets Dr. Bledsoe who is addressed in the quote. Dr. Bledsoe fools the narrator into thinking that he believes in him. Bledsoe says in an earlier paragraph “You’re nobody, son. You don’t exist can’t you see that”(Ellison p. 146)? This quote furthers the idea that the reader is invisible. Although Dr. Bledsoe is a fellow African American, he feels no obligation to help aid other black people. He feels that since he holds this position of power that he is above all other black people and more important than

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