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Invisible Man Speech

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In Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison the narrator recalls the dying words of his grandfather, “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.” (Ellison 264) These words haunt the narrator throughout his life and especially as he gains success as a student and approval from whites. The narrator’s graduation speech about humbleness embodies some understanding of his grandfather’s words. This need to be humble wasn’t necessarily felt by the narrator, but he knew that this is what the white people wanted to hear. This speech holds resemblance to the values Booker T. Washington held, which is why it favored the whites. Washington’s methods …show more content…

This honor the narrator is provided with by being invited to speak is not as prestigious as the narrator believes. What is an educational speech is no more important than the gruesome boxing match. The simple fact that this boxing match will take place prior to the speech demonstrates how this grotesque entertainment ranks higher on a white hierarchal level of importance compared to a colored man’s words. The invitation itself forces the narrator to submit to white humiliation prior to being given the right to go up on stage to speak. The narrator is grouped within a stereotypical belief of unintelligent athletic colored boys when asked to participate as the entertainment. The whites assume that because he is black he must be unintelligent, prone to violence, and capable of fighting. When the narrator observes the drunken town leaders it becomes clear that these individuals do not take him seriously. Throughout the “Battle Royale the reader can feel a sort of anxiety on the part of the narrator for it all to be over. In an attempt to put an end to this degrading situation he tries to pretend, “I lay prone, pretending that I was knocked out, but felt myself seized by hands and yanked to my feet. “Get going, black boy! Mix it up!” My arms were like lead, my head smarting from blows.” (Ellison 268) This scene

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