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Literary Techniques Used In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man

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Invisible Man The book “Invisible Man” written by Ralph Ellison is set in Harlem during the 1930s. Setting is often a powerful component to the tone of the entire novel. Some of the tones that are discussed in the Prologue are apologetic, disdainful and hopelessness. Tones in the Prologue sometimes foreshadow events in the future. One of the tones that are used in the prologue to foreshadow events in the future is apologetic. In the beginning of the Prologue, the narrator feels like an “invisible man” and not to some biochemical accident or supernatural cause but to the unwillingness of others to notice him (3). Keeping in thought that people thought of him as an “invisible man”, a man accidently bumped into him and didn’t apologized and the narrator got mad furthermore threatened the man. After coming to his senses he let the man go feeling sorry for what he had done. This tone was foreshadowed in …show more content…

In the Prologue, the narrator secretively steals electricity from a company called Monopolated Light and Power. The company knows someone is stealing electricity but is unable to capture the culprit (7). Later in the novel, disdainful is foreshadowed at the end of the book where the narrator doesn’t respect a woman for who she is but for his own benefit. The narrator uses Sybil, George’s wife, to get information about her husband and Jack (515). Finally, the last tone that was used in the Prologue was hopelessness. It is known that the narrator is felt like an “invisible man” where no one seems to think of him of anything. The narrator describes his aching need to make others recognize him, and says he has found that such attempts rarely succeed (4).This was foreshadowed later on in the book, where there was no hope for him to return back to college in the fall (190). This is not only where the narrator gave up on going back to college but decided never to go back

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