Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Invisible Man Essays (2048 words) - Invisible Man, Narration
  Invisible man    "Who the hell am I?" (Ellison 386) This question puzzled the invisible  man, the unidentified, anonymous narrator of Ralph Ellison's acclaimed novel    Invisible Man. Throughout the story, the narrator embarks on a mental and  physical journey to seek what the narrator believes is "true  identity," a belief quite mistaken, for he, although unaware of it, had  already been inhabiting true identities all along. The narrator's life is filled  with constant eruptions of mental traumas. The biggest psychological burden he  has is his identity, or rather his misidentity. He feels "wearing on the  nerves" (Ellison 3) for people to see him as what they like to believe he  is and not see him as what he really is. Throughout his life, he takes on  several different identities and none, he thinks, adequately represents his true  self, until his final one, as an invisible man. The narrator thinks the many  identities he possesses does not reflect himself, but he fails to recognize that  identity is simply a mirror that reflects the surrounding and the person who  looks into it. It is only in this reflection of the immediate surrounding can  the viewers relate the narrator's identity to. The viewers see only the part of  the narrator that is apparently connected to the viewer's own world. The part  obscured is unknown and therefore insignificant. Lucius Brockway, an old  operator of the paint factory, saw the narrator only as an existence threatening  his job, despite that the narrator is sent there to merely assist him. Brockway  repeatedly question the narrator of his purpose there and his mechanical  credentials but never even bother to inquire his name. Because to the old  fellow, who the narrator is as a person is uninterested. What he is as an  object, and what that object's relationship is to Lucius Brockway's engine room  is important. The narrator's identity is derived from this relationship, and  this relationship suggests to Brockway that his identity is a  "threat". However the viewer decides to see someone is the identity  they assign to that person. The Closing of The American Mind, by Allan Bloom,  explains this identity phenomenon by comparing two "ships of states"  (Bloom 113). If one ship "is to be forever at sea, [and] ?K another is to  reach port and the passengers go their separate ways, they think about one  another and their relationships on the ship very differently in the two  cases" (Bloom 113). In the first state, friends will be acquainted and  enemies will be formed, while in the second state, the passengers will most  likely not bother to know anyone new, and everyone will get off the ship and  remain strangers to one another. A person's identity is unalike to every  different viewer at every different location and situation. This point the  narrator senses but does not fully understand. During his first Brotherhood  meeting, he exclaimed, "I am a new citizen of the country of your vision, a  native of your fraternal land!" (Ellison 328) He preaches to others the  fact that identity is transitional yet he does not accept it himself. Maybe he  thought it distressing being liked not for being his true self but because of  the identity he puts on or being hated not for being himself but because of his  identity. To Dr. Bledsoe, the principal of the black southern university where  the narrator attended, the narrator is a petty "black educated fool"  (Ellison 141). To Mr. Norton, a rich white trustee of the black university, the  narrator is a simple object intertwined with his fate, a mere somebody, he  explained to the narrator, that "were somehow connected with [his (Mr.    Norton's)] destiny" (Ellison 41). To the organizers of the Brotherhood,    Jack, Tobitt, and the others, the narrator is what they designed him to be. They  designed for him an identity of a social speaker and leader, and to his  listeners and followers, he is just that. Those were his multiple identities and  none were less authentic than the others because to his onlookers, he is what  his identities say he is, even if he thinks differently. The narrator always had  a desire for people "who could give [him] a proper reflection of [his]  importance" (Ellison 160). But there is no such thing as a proper  reflection because his importance varies among different people. Subconsciously,  he craves attention. He wants recognition and status, and wants to be honored as  someone special. He must feel that he "can have no dignity if his status is  not special, if he is not essentially different"(Bloom 193), therefore    
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