As
for the presence of white and black in Invisible
Man by Ellison, the author seems to reverse the meanings readers
typically associate with each color, particularly because he is explicitly
referring to race. The way the narrator uses each word directly reflects
his emotions toward each race at different points throughout his journey. In
this manner, the meanings of black as disgraceful and animalistic and white as
civilized and superior become ambiguous as his interpretation of them changes.
In the scene where the invisible man has his face forced just inches away from
the face of a drunken and passed out Mr.Norton he states, “He was like a
formless white death, suddenly appeared before me, a death which had been there
all the time and which had now revealed itself in the madness of the Golden Day”(86).
There seems to be a paradoxical use of white in this quote as both the truth of
the situation and also its façade. Having never been so close to a white man
the invisible man uses “white death” to characterize the always imminent danger
the white man posed towards him as seeming innocent and of pure intent at most
times but from up close and under deeper inspection, their complex of
superiority could never allow for a safe interaction to form. Just as life and
death can never exist in compromise without one reigning over the other, the
white death represents all white men reigning with a tight leash to the still naïve,
instinctual protagonist who senses the truth and illusions enough only to be
able to pull away from them.
8. You have done an excellent job in the analysis of the quote. By pulling out the formless white death and inspecting that at a closer range (yes, play on words intended), you have shown how perceptive the IM is at this point to observe this particular detail but not fully aware of how the facade works in his life currently. You have some great sentences: "Just as life and death can never exist in compromise without one reigning over the other" is just one. Make sure to relate the analysis back to the beginning of the paragraph when you stated that Ellison blurs the lines of the stereotypes of both races. His ambiguous use of these stereotypes and the absurdity of their actions are also important. Well done.
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