The Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison

1150 Words3 Pages

At some point in each person’s life, he or she has felt invisible. Alas, being invisible isn’t as inauspicious as it seems; on the contrary, it can be quite beneficial. Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man reveals the life of an individual who lives his life, figuratively, as the title suggests. Through his travels and experiences, having left college, Invisible Man learns essential lessons that enlighten him of his invisibility.

Invisible Man is on a path approaching his final destination of revelation; this includes the notion that dispossession is the backbone of white supremacy. Whites deprive minorities of basically everything they are entitled to: social justice, racial equality, and power. Therefore, Blacks are kept a ignorant as possible. As Invisible Man witnesses an eviction for the first time, he is quick to action and slow to anger. Filled with distraught for the couple, he finds himself shedding his cloak of invisibility to stand up for the elderly black couple and speaks to the crowd. Ellison points out, “That’s a good word, ‘Dispossessed’! ‘Dispossessed,’ eighty-seven years and dispossessed of what? They ain’t got nothing, they can’t get nothing. So who was dispossessed?” (Ellison 216). IM explains to the group how even though the couple is being deprived of everything they hold dear, they as a race must not give the white man their rage. If they do give in, blacks will only dig themselves deeper into oppression; they have to be smart. In this way, IM stands out from the crowd; people are listening to his words and keeping them. For once, IM is in control of a social situation, thus contrasting the narrator’s theme of invisibility. His individuality has broken through the crowd like glass and he is seen at las...

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...reality, IM has used his invisibility to his advantage as well. On the contrary, blind white figures such as Bledsoe, Norton, and Westrum have used it to his disadvantage. Many people in the world today are invisible but they don’t acquire realistic advantages as Invisible Man does. Kidnappings, rape, and bullying are all examples of people wearing the invisible cloak. Society must be conscious not to categorize these victims invisible, otherwise humanity will be lost. A world cannot thrive with a population of invisible people, nor with blind.

Works Cited

Schlosser, S.E. “Brer Rabbit Ears a Dollar-A-Minute.”

Ellison, Ralph. The Invisible Man. New York: Random

House, 1952. 33-448. Print.

Washington, Brooker T. “The 1895 Atlanta

Compromise.” Cotton States and International

Expodition, Atlanta. 18 September 1895.

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