The Invisible Man

977 Words2 Pages

Every day, racism is perceived as a negative aspect of society. When people think of racism, they obviously think of hatred, ignorance and bigotry. Racism has been a part of world culture since recorded history and, no doubt, before then. When one thinks of racism in the United States, invariably, though not only, the struggle of the African American is singled out. In Ralph Ellison’s novel, Invisible Man, Ellison expounds the theme that American society willfully ignores and oppresses African Americans. But within the rampant evils of racism, can there be found a positive aspect in this evil? The answer lies beyond the text and delves into the thoughts behind the words to find the message intended by the author, which is this: it is impossible to maintain one’s personal identity and one’s racial identity simultaneously; the only courtesy racism bestows upon those whom it affects.

People see what they want to see. Most of the time they look, make assumptions, and do not see something for what it really is. It is a ritual, often unconsciously, practiced by all; profiling and stereotyping. When a person’s entire existence has been one of being constantly underestimated and categorized solely based on outer appearance, and once they have realized their position and capitalize upon it, it becomes quite simple to work beneath the scenes and take what they want out of life without any notice. In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man the view of invisibility is turned around so that a man is in plain sight of everyone but do to a lack of observation nobody recognizes what he accomplishes. Once the narrator's eyes are open to the real world and he realizes that being right doesn't mean you have power and without power you are nobody and remain ...

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...enting the Everyman and epitomizing the sufferings of his race (Voices of Civil Rights). Though the main character remains confused, certain instances based on racial incidents that allow him, if not to have found himself, to ponder more and deeper questions about his identity. Even though he may have not found explicit answers, is not the quest for knowledge and for self-realization positive? It is implicitly within these questions that plague our Invisible Man that we can find the subtle traces of the positive aspects of racism. Ellison gives us no final resolution to the novel; Invisible Man is as perplexed as ever as to his identity, but he is, in no way, the same man he was early on. He has changed and will continue to change. Through struggles we all learn; it lies within us to find the positive in the negative.

Works Cited
http://www.voicesofcivilrights.org/

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