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Invisible Man Character Analysis

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If you skipped from the end of the prologue of Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison, all the way until the protagonist’s eviction speech, you would probably pick up the plot and character developments without a problem. The first few ordeals described in the novel can be infuriating because of the narrator’s naïve outlook and his persistence in trying to follow a ‘respectable’ path upwards in life. All of the psychological shifts that lead up to the captivating scenario from the first few pages happen after the entrance of Brother Jack, and suspenseful segments appear more often – and arguably more effectively – in the second half of the book. Despite this, the first half is just as important, due to Ellison’s detailed characterization of the …show more content…

However, he truly believes that his humility in writing a speech about the importance of being humble as the ‘lower race’ has won him the chance to climb up to a better place. Surrounding the narrator’s appearance at this “smoker” are flickers of the sentiments he’s had to discard. His least favorite memory is hearing his grandfather’s last words: “Son, after I’m gone I want you to keep up the good fight… I want you to overcome ‘em with yeses, undermine ‘em with grins, agree ‘em to death and destruction, let ‘em swoller you till they vomit or bust wide open” (16). One would expect the narrator to hold on to this dream, that if black communities prove themselves to be good Christians, Americans, and everything else, they will eventually prevail over their oppressors. After all, he “visualized [him]self as a potential Booker T. Washington” (18). in those days. But because it directly states that white society is the enemy, none of the people close to the protagonist’s grandfather can accept it, and it only causes them fear. The night after he receives his scholarship, the narrator has a dream about his grandfather. The dead man hands him a briefcase, and tells him to open the endless series of envelopes. He grows tired, but when he reaches the innermost one, his grandfather tells him “’Them’s years… Now

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