Analysis Of Invisible Man

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Invisible Man: The Invisibility of Blacks Society can make someone feel invisible. Some citizens choose to remain out of the forefront, but some are forced into obscurity. Some may be dismissed because of the way others act, dress, and talk. Society 's ignoring of its own citizens get more serious than that and it goes to the skin color. This is the experience of the unnamed protagonist in Ralph Ellison 's symbolic novel Invisible Man. In Invisible Man, the protagonist 's experience as an African American during the 1930s demonstrates the invisibility of blacks during racism.
To the protagonist he pictures whites as sleepwalkers. Thinking they can’t see him because they are still asleep. To him it seems like they are just still asleep living in their imaginary world where blacks are not seen. Know not to interrupt them “... walk softly so as not to awaken them; there are few things in the world …show more content…

The man didn’t seem to happy for being bumped into, but how can one see another if they are invisible. A little street light lighted on them “...perhaps because of near darkness he saw me and called me an insulting name” (Ellison 4). In a dark night not much can be seen.
In practically plain darkness the white male calls him a bad name due to the protagonist skin color. The protagonist thought of apologizing to him for accidentally bumping into him is gone due to the rude language. Enraged the protagonist pushed him onto the floor in a angry matter “I sprang at him seized his coat lapels and demanded that he apologize” (Ellison 4).
Twenty years ago, the protagonist starts a thought of him and his race are invisible but yet visible. They feel invisible by the why whites refuse to see their full potential. They were visible in the sense that whites just viewing them as property, machines, and animals. This was bad to the black society they are being judged by their

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