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Invisible Man
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1. What makes Ellison's narrator invisible?
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John
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Mar 02, 2017 02:51AM

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His color but it must be more because he is also invisible to other blacks. I think that all of us are pretty much invisible a lot of the time. People are so self absorbed they pay little attention to those around them.
It really speaks to the blindness of people around him. He really isn't invisible, others choose not to see him as he really is.
This book may have been written in the forty's and fifties but it is still relevant.
It really speaks to the blindness of people around him. He really isn't invisible, others choose not to see him as he really is.
This book may have been written in the forty's and fifties but it is still relevant.
He is invisible not because people don't see him but because they don't understand him. The whites can ignore him because he is black and the other blacks don't understand him.
He really becomes invisible when he puts on his hat and glasses and everyone thinks he is someone else.
At points in the novel he is completely visible but still not understood.
He really becomes invisible when he puts on his hat and glasses and everyone thinks he is someone else.
At points in the novel he is completely visible but still not understood.

Some people don't want to see him as he is a person of color. Some people don't see him, as they put him in a role that does not fit the whole person. Or simply that they don't look close enough to perceive the whole person and his circumstances.

I agree that the narrator was invisible to both blacks and white. I agree with Book that he was misunderstood by all.