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The Quotor In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man

Decent Essays

Invisible Man is like a musical work. The novel goes through the highs and lows of the narrator who is nameless. I would like to believe that the narrator is nameless because the narrator is Ralph Ellison. This novel is like Ralph Ellison’s unofficial biography. Ellison mainly focuses on the narrator finding himself and learning not to be invisible.
Ellison’s style is jazzy. He makes references to Louis Armstrong and how Louis Armstrong made music out of being invisible. (Prologue 8) Ellison also explains that being invisible means you’re never really on the beat. (Prologue 8) Ellison tells the narrator's whole story not just the good parts, but also the bad. This is like music. Music explains the good that happens in life, but there are also songs for the bad.
There are many memorable quotes in Invisible Man. One very important quote is “ ‘You’re nobody, son. You don’t exist-can’t you see that? The white folk tell everybody what to think-except men like me. I tell them; that’s my life, telling white folk how to think about the things I know about.’ ” (Chapter 6: pg 143) This is where Dr. Bledsoe is talking to the narrator. Dr. Bledsoe is explaining how, as an African American man with power, he gets to tell the white folks what to think about the college the narrator is attending. This quote is also important because it’s one of the first of many events that verifies the narrator is “invisible”. Dr. Bledsoe told the narrator that he’s a nobody. This made the narrator feel

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