The Importance Of Sight And Invisibility In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man

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Simply, Kim posits, that since these white men withhold themselves from lashing out in violence towards the black boys in the ring, they instead, watch as the young black males harm each other as a means of self pleasure. This can be equated to an individual masturbating to pornographic images or film. As the white townsmen watch the Battle Royal, porn, they begin to get aroused until they climax from viewing the last black boy standing in the ring. The underlying homoerotic oppression pictured in Invisible Man indirectly feminizes the protagonist. Critics, like Shelly Jarenski, argue that the white female characters and the narrator play similar roles in the novel. At its core, Jarenski’s article “Invisibility Embraced: The Abject as a Site …show more content…

Invisibility serves as a large umbrella from which other critical discussion, including that of sight, stems. Sight and Invisibility are interconnected when viewing Invisible Man. Essentially, it is because of the lack of sight exhibited by the narrator, that he is considered invisible. Author Alice Bloch’s article published in The English Journal, is a brief yet intricate exploration of the theme of sight in Ellison’s Invisible Man. By interpreting some of the signifying imagery, (i.e. the statue on campus, Reverend Bledsoe’s blindness, Brother Jack’s false eye) within the novel, Bloch vividly portrays how sight is a major part of Ellison’s text. The author contends that Ellison’s protagonist possesses sightfulness which he is unaware of until the end of the book; however, once aware, he tries to live more insightfully by coming out of his hole to shed his invisibility and expose the white man’s subjugation. What is interesting in Bloch’s article is how she uses the imagery of sight in the novel as a means to display how it is equated to invisibility …show more content…

Each chapter will vary in focus, but will be centered on Giovanni’s Room and Invisible Man. The current chapter, chapter one, is an introduction into the essential theme of skewed racial and sexual identity as a result of significations that will be explored and discussed throughout this thesis. A literature review for each narrative serves as the conceptual framework utilized to assist readers with comprehending the proposed topic. The literature review dissects the critical literary discourse that has been published for both James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room and Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man. Deconstructing what has and is being theorized by literary theorists and incorporating it with the aforementioned theme, permits readers to be familiar with the content that will be mentioned later on. The methodology is a supporting sector of the literature review. The methodology applies the theory of Jacques Lacan’s “Mirror Stage”, which acts as additional support of the previously mentioned theme of flawed racial and sexual identity due to signifying signs. In essence, the methodology applies Lacan’s “Mirror Stage” theory, to the central theme, in a means to illustrate how each protagonist of Giovanni’s Room and Invisible Man encounters adversity, both sexually and racially, as a product of the underlying signs found within each narrative. The introduction, review of literature, and methodology cohesively work as the foundation

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