Preview

The Invisible Man

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
601 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Invisible Man
The Invisible Man is the story of a young black man whose name the reader never learns. He is a young man from the South who is haunted by his grandfather's deathbed warning against conforming to the wishes of white people because the young man sees that as the way to be successful.
The narrator's first real glimpse at the cruel manipulation of white people comes when he is invited to the local men's club to read the speech he prepared for his high school graduation. He gives the speech and is rewarded with a briefcase and a scholarship to a black college, but only after he endures the humiliation of performing for the white men there. He and several black boys are forced to box each other and then scramble around a rug pulsing with electric current to grab coins while the
…show more content…
Bledsoe, the college's dean and a successful black man who is well respected in his community and his field. Unfortunately, the narrator makes a dreadful mistake when he is chauffeuring Mr. Norton, a wealthy white man who donates a great deal of money to the college. He inadvertently reveals the seedier side of the black race by allowing the man to stop and speak with Joe True blood, a poor, black man ostracized from the black community because he got his own daughter pregnant. After the upsetting encounter with True blood, the white man is feeling weak and needs a drink, so the young man takes him to the closest place he can think of, the local black bar and brothel. After a disastrous encounter with a mentally altered war veteran, the narrator takes Mr. Norton back to campus. Dr. Bledsoe is so furious with the narrator's indiscretion and stupidity that he expels him. Dr. Bledsoe offers him some hope, however, by offering to write him several letters of recommendation to deliver to the school's trustees in New York. The dean tells the young man that if he makes enough money for tuition, he can come back to

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Invisible Men

    • 770 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The Negro Leagues were one of the most important and influential movements to happen in baseball history. Without these ‘Invisible Men’, who knows where baseball’s racial standpoint with not only African American’s, but others such as Cuban, Dominican, and South American players, would be in the Major Leagues. Throughout the book, one pressing theme stays from beginning to end: Segregation.…

    • 770 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Wright go to work, the boss told him to learn something here, but when he is going to seek opportunities to learn, his white coworkers warn him that he is black after all, and do not deserve to learn, then Wright reply politely. One day, he is framed that he does not call a white guy with “Mr.”, but he is black, so he cannot explain for himself but scuttle away, and never come back again as warned. When Wright is working in a store, he witnesses his boss and boss’s son drug a black woman into the store and beat her violently for inability to pay bills. The only thing Wright can do is standing there. After beating that poor…

    • 548 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Dr. Bledsoe is the president of the IM’s college, and the IM looks up to him until he turns out to be a big phony. While Dr. Bledsoe preaches a doctrine of hard work and humility as the key to black advancement, he retains his power as president of the college by "playing the nigger" – he scrapes, bows, and all the while deceives the powerful white men upon whose patronage his power depends. Thus Dr. Bledsoe's supposed commitment to his race is a sham; at one point he declares that he would see every black man in the country lynched before he would give up his position of authority. What makes Dr. Bledsoe such an influential villain is that the protagonist (IM) truly did trust in him and look up to him as a role model.…

    • 969 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In this chapter, the main character introduces himself living in a time period where racism and prejudice is very apparent. He begins the story by telling of his grandfather’s final minutes on earth. The main character’s name is never revealed but he refers to himself as an invisible man. His grandfather was known as a quiet and meek man but on his deathbed he tells his son, the invisible man’s father, that life is a fight and he expects him to keep up the fight after he is gone. The invisible man lives his life as he grandfather did but which is against the advice his grandfather gave to his father. Once the invisible man graduates from school, he gives a speech that is so well written, the town’s leaders invite him a dinner to give the…

    • 485 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The first chapter of Ralph Ellison’s novel, Invisible Man, is the thesis of the main themes, motifs, characters, and etc. that are seen throughout the book. The first sentence of the book starts with the main character reflecting on his past saying “it goes back some 20 years”, this is the telling sign that the start is essentially the end. As the main character progresses through the first chapter he starts to bring up rather daunting subjects such as his who he is as a person and who he self identifies as, the main character states that he is ‘invisible’ but he elaborates that being invisible is not socially advantageous but rather unequal because of being black in the south he is not seen as an equal human. The main character is told who…

    • 273 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the story, the narrator is haunted by his grandfather’s last dying words, urging his family to “keep up the good fight (16).” His grandfather admits to have been a “traitor” to his heritage by living in “the enemy’s country.” Consequently, the narrator spends a great deal of his life in shame. His notable talent for public speaking gained him popularity within his community, especially among the white elitists. Following a speech at an event he is…

    • 820 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ralph Ellison's novel, The Invisible Man, depicts an epic of racial change and bitter race relations in America; yet, it was not meant to describe the struggle of black, white, or yellow people, but to illustrate how a man's experiences through human error shape his being and his reality. The narrator in this story, who remains unnamed, builds up to a conclusive invisibility through the knowledge that many different people he meets along his journey pass down to him. His character in the end and the reality in which he lives in had all built up with the help of the little invisible characters mentioned in the story. As the story moves along, the narrator encounters Emerson, a man mentioned as…

    • 1045 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Invisible Man

    • 1208 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In the novel Invisible Man, Ralph Ellison uses recurring events to prove its vital significance to the overall theme. Ellison’s writing style of incorporating recurring events makes it evident to the reader that there is something more than what is being described or stated. The recurring events that reveal a more potent meaning is the narrator receiving letters intended to give him meaningful advice and the narrator also being controlled by a higher authority. These two particular events compare to a greater intensity of understanding the illusion of freedom and the deceptions associated with it. Ralph Ellison chooses to use the struggle between two races that have much historical meaning of one group being the oppressed and the other as…

    • 1208 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The second instance of betrayal that the narrator faces is when Dr. Bledsoe kicks him out of the college after the narrator looked up to and aspired to be just like him. Bledsoe betrays him even further when the narrator finds out what's in the letters of recommendation to jobs in the city. This betrayal especially stings after the narrator really looked up to Bledsoe and wanted to be just like him, and an innocent mistake that really wasn't a mistake causes Bledsoe to destroy everything the narrator has worked for.…

    • 368 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison is a novel that explores racism in the 1930’s through the eyes of the narrator, a young black man. The novel describes the story of a young unnamed black man in the 1930’s that is very hopeful for his future, but fails to realize how prominent racism is in the United States. This naivety soon gets him expelled when he reviles his identity to a white peer. After this disheartening incident occurs the narrator is forced to move to Harlem, New York, and becomes the spokesmen for the Communist Party, known as the Brotherhood. Yet, as he works for the organization he still finds himself lost in this world which he is yet to know. This position puts himself in grave dangers with political enemies and racial purists who force him to face the truth of racism and the absence of his identity. As he learns more…

    • 1008 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    That is me. It is October as I am writing this, so naturally my anonymity will be presented under the guise of a spooky skeleton. Here are some fun facts about me. I know you care, because you clicked this. And are still reading.…

    • 531 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Living in the city, one sees many homeless people. After a while, each person loses any individuality and only becomes "another homeless person." Without a name or source of identification, every person would look the same. Ignoring that man sitting on the sidewalk and acting as if we had not seen him is the same as pretending that he did not exist. "Invisibility" is what the main character/narrator of Ralph Ellison 's Invisible Man called it when others would not recognize or acknowledge him as a person.…

    • 1069 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Invisible Man Betrayal

    • 1144 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In the novel Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, we follow the narrator through his growth as a person, to his conclusion that he is an Invisible Man, and to him realizing that he needs to leave the hole he has put himself in. For the narrator, growth has been a huge part of becoming who he is, growth was set about by many different things throughout the story. One of the things that helped the narrator grow is the betrayal of the president of the narrator’s college, Dr. Bledsoe, a person that he trusts and admires. Dr. Bledsoe is the president of the college he went to and someone whom he looked up to greatly. But when the narrator threatens Dr. Bledsoe’s ideals, the college, and his own race, Dr. Bledsoe feels betrayed, causing him to betray the narrator. Dr. Bledsoe shows the narrator what it means to be betrayed, which in time forces the narrator to grow.…

    • 1144 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Invisible Man

    • 867 Words
    • 4 Pages

    As an outstanding student at the premier Negro college in the south, the narrator is given the opportunity and the honor of chauffeuring one of the visiting board members around the town for an afternoon. But when he has a badly-timed lapse in judgment and agrees to show Norton the most unsophisticated regions of the town, he is expelled and sent to New York to “work” and gain funds for tuition, but in reality this is the last he will ever see of the college. However, for the narrator, out of sight doesn’t necessarily mean out of mind as he finds himself often comparing his current life to his days at the college and reflecting upon those fateful hours spent with Norton. Though he once bragged about his “college education”, he comes to realize it’s insignificance in his city life. The mistake resulting in…

    • 867 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Short Story Critique

    • 931 Words
    • 4 Pages

    men because two of them were colored writers and the third one was a painter. The men responded to the white people’s enthusiasm in a bored and arrogant manner. After the conversation, a black man knocked down a woman in the restaurant. One of the white people at the narrator’s table mistook the woman to be white and angrily confronted the black man about knocking down a white woman. Once he found out that…

    • 931 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays