We all experienced the time of discovery of our identity. Ralph Ellison 's novel "Invisible Man" solves the problem of identity formation by striving for invisible people to find their identity. He considers himself "invisible" because he refuses to see his personality and wisdom. Because of racism and the expectations of others, the narrator of the novel "Invisible Man" is invisible to others and to himself. In this time of his brotherhood "battle royal" at his time, and an important part of this, novel support as a Harlem riot.
Details: An invisible man is Ralph Ellison's only novel and is widely recognized as one of the great novels of African-American literature. Ellison's invisible but invisible as the hero's identity - the most important, as the meaning of black - and a variety of masks, face of personal experience and social fantasy power. Experiencing more social and political allegations, what does the American African American history - what it means for social or racial invisibility - the special qualities of the novel identity of the smart combination The presence of inquiries. The first person narrator is still unknown about the people's retrospective accounts from the South of the desolate world environment, transitioning to New York City through the surreal reality of his racial discrimination
"Invisible Man" is a novel by Rex Ellison published by Random House in 1952. Not only is the face of African-Americans at the beginning of the 20th century, such as black nationalism, the relationship between black identity and Marxism, as well as the reformist's race booker T. Washington's policy, as well as personality and personal identity We will solve many of the social, ideological problems of the question. Invisible Man (Invisible Man) was awarded the National Book Fiction Award in 1953. In 1998, the Hyundai Library cited Invisible Man 19 as one of the 100 British best masterpieces of the 20th century. It calls it "the typical 20th century American popular music" rather than the "time" magazine, including the 1923 novel to 2005 TIME 100 best English novels, "Ethnic fiction, growing up as fiction "Malcolm Bradbury and Richard Rueland recognize the existence of" absurd like Kafka "