In the opening scene of Invisible Man, we introduce some of the novel themes such as blindness, invisibility, and overcoming of racial stereotypes. The invisible open scene begins with telling the reader how much he does not see to the reader and how he understands and accepts what he does not see. The opening scene of the novel introduces the theme of blindness. As the narrator said, "When they approach me, they can only see things around me, their own, or images of imagination - indeed, all things except me" Ellison 3)
"Invisible Man" by H. G. Wells consists of many small themes forming two themes in the novel. Some secondary themes are to think about unknown events and take action before denying them. It is based on two major themes: scientific experiments and social ignorance. The most important theme in the novel is an invisible Griffin ongoing experiment, which is not fully planned. The importance of launching into invisible people Ralph Ellison's invisible human paint factory provides a background of a series of very important events in the novel. In addition, it provides a number of symbols that will affect the interpretation of the reader. Among these symbols are related to the structure of Mr. Kimbro and Lucius Brockway. The first of many of these scenarios contain invisible and symbolic characters.
Ralph Ellison 's "invisible people" are dotted with symbols. In particular, the first scene is widely known as "Royal War". This is an important part of the novel. Readers are not asked by most people, because they are interfered with by many people and introduced to invisible people as instructed not to be late for their own position. From the beginning of the novel, the talker pays attention to his education. His education first brought a calf briefcase to him when the manager rewarded him for success for success, he said, "Keep this prize good (Ellison; p. 32) Invisible people cherish briefcase, including scholarships offered to the state's black university, but it represents a white man, an authoritative life for invisible people
Invisible people as jazz novels. The record of the important person of "Let me do (dark and blue)" of Louis Armstrong at the beginning of "Invisible Man" is the subject of the novel to a certain extent. One is that blacks become images and actors of the center in American cultural life, and black Americans are certainly Americans in an important sense. The scene where the hero is singing Armstrong's song symbolically told that Scottish ice cream (white) he ate was soaked in the black parsley gin (red) blues of gramophone. This scene also highlights how important the creation of African-American art is to the behavior of Ellison's novel.