The Liberty Paint M Symbolism In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man

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Author Background Ralph Ellison was born March 1, 1914 in Oklahoma City. He wrote Invisible Man in the late 1940s’s. Writing was not Ellison’s original life plans, he went to Tuskegee Institute, hoping to compose a symphony. He then ended up working in New York City, trying to find a musician job, but while he was there he met writer, Richard Write, who encouraged him to write. From there and on Ellison wrote books. Ellison has won several awards for Invisible Man, including the National Book Award for Fiction, Russwurm Award, and many others. Ellison died of cancer in 1994, and he was working on many short stories before his death, which were later published in 1996. Ralph Ellison’s writing style illustrates that neath African Americans nor caucasians were prepared to give respect to one another nor receive it around the Great Depression time. He demonstrates the struggle throughout Invisible Man. Ellison used symbolism to make sure his theme is reached across to readers, and he also foreshadows to give the …show more content…

The narrator finds work at the plant, and begins his day by mixing white paint, that the plant is famous for. To do this, he has to pour black paint into white paint and when it is stirred it becomes whiter. The racial inequality of the paint plant is symbolized because everywhere the black workers are made invisible by the white workers, just like the white paint covers the black paint when it is mixed. Although the success of the company is due to the work of the blacks, it is never revealed because the whites are in an attempt to dominate them. The inequality is further demonstrated in the slogan of the plants paint “If It’s Optic White, It’s the Right White,” which means that anything that is not white is not right. The plant has a reliance on the work of blacks, but their attempt to conceal them in everything demonstrates that the north was not all that the narrator expected it to

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