Back to category: English

Limited version - please login or register to view the entire paper.

Invisible Man 1

The Narrator in Ellison’s Invisible Man

Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is the story of an educated black man who has been oppressed and controlled by white men throughout his life. As the narrator, he is nameless throughout the novel as he journeys from the South, where he studies at an all-black college, to Harlem where he joins a Communist-like party known as the Brotherhood. Throughout the novel, the narrator is on a search for his true identity. Several letters are given to him by outsiders that provide him with a role: student, patient, and a member of the Brotherhood. One by one he discards these as he continues to grow closer to the sense of his true self. The entire story can be summed up when the narrator says "I'm an invisible man and it placed me in a hole- or showed me the hole I was in...." (455). During the novel, the narrator values several important things, which shape his identity as well as his future. Through his experiences and the people he has met, the narr...

Posted by: William Katz

Limited version - please login or register to view the entire paper.