I am "an unbeliever" because the blacks of this story symbolize the black people whose society blacks failed. He was used throughout the book, humiliating and discriminating. Because society does not think that he is a real person, he feels that he is not seen by society. Because this book is written in the first person singular, reading is very difficult. I have to think seriously about the information Ellison emphasized in this book.
The invisible one is a classic of American literature. It is a story of an invisible, unnamed man. He can not see the word or the body. Invisible is literally because he is ignored by the mainstream society. Invisible things are also symbolic. The reason for not seeing is his race. Because the hero - the invisible person - is black. When the audience interacts with society and people around it, the audience can see the event. Despite his relationship with him, the world is still ignoring him. At the beginning of the book, he has symbolic invisibility At the end of the book, he really does not look. Stealing electricity from the city, he lives in the basement, not seen by other people in the world. In many respects, Ellison compares the meaning of invisibility and the meaning of black.
I think about a white man who plays a black protagonist in front of Ralph Ellison 's classic invisible man. ("I can not see it," he explained, "Because people just refused to see me.") The Caucasian swears black in the dark. The man refused to apologize, so "an invisible man" made him a great defeat. When he saw me, what happened to Columbus' imagination? In the context of bruises and party movements, is my election protection T shirt enough to bring him? Among the top sponsors of the shirt itself is not "NAACP", is it a name big enough to be seen in the distance? What kind of role does a black man play?
As the novel continues, invisible people often face self-identification problems. It is difficult for invisible people to understand his position in the world after being exiled from college by a school leader in front of a white wealthy donor. He began to imagine his possibilities through the university, but soon he knows that Dr. Breadsoe is more interested in maintaining his image and strength than focusing on student interests I will. "For three years, I always thought myself to be a man, but here he used several words to make him feel helpless like a baby." 8 In his college days, The invisible believed that the only acceptable way for blacks to achieve success was through the academic channels official; therefore, it reminds me of Booker T. Washington's idea. Invisible people left college, disillusioned, betrayed, looking for new meanings