Invisible Man
By: Top • Essay • 277 Words • December 18, 2009 • 1,005 Views
Essay title: Invisible Man
The Invisible Man is rich in literary devices. This book is written as a satire of. Not much was expected of African Americans at that time, and so they did whatever they had to do, whereas whites had certain things they were expected to do to be successful. Ellison uses the first person narrative in order to reveal the narrator’s thoughts and feelings, so we can see more clearly his changes in personality. The book is considered a milestone in American literature, because it was written at a time when things like race issues were not commonly discussed.
This novel is focused on the theme that American society purposefully ignores blacks, treating them as if they were invisible. The book contains many symbols throughout it. In the paint factory, the black workers who keep it running serve as symbols of the blacks who work unnoticed to keep things running for white society. They are also symbols of how that society takes advantage of them, as the workers are