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Invisible Man By Ralph Ellison

Decent Essays

Imagine looking from a tall mountain on the world, understanding how society works, and how to achieve everything. Knowing these things would be knowing a comprehensive theory of the world. But does anyone know such a theory? Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison, indicates an answer of no. By constantly question classification and belief systems, Invisible Man shows that a single, true, comprehensive theory has never been understood by a human. Also, if one has any chance of discovering this theory, one must forget everything they know. From the very beginning of the novel the narrator prompts the reader to reanalyze how the world looks at different ideas. For instance, the narrator immediately follows his description of a seemingly perfect place in nature “virginal and untested by lovers” within a description of the insane asylum, when describing the university campus (36). This immediate comparison is not just a creation of the narrator’s mind, which would make it liable to debate over whether the theory presented by the juxtaposition is meant to be true or not; the placement of the asylum and nature right next to each is present in nature, they are physically next to each other. The narrator could not have made up the scenario to make his point, he is only pointing out a reality of nature: insanity is never far from beauty, perhaps they are more similar than one would think. Is nature really corrupted? Whatever the message, one thing is unarguably clear: however people

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