In Chapter 5 of the Invisible Man, after Barbee gives his
speech, the Invisible Man walks out despite the “disapproving eyes of teachers
and matrons” (134) because he is so overwhelmed with Barbee’s speech. Once
outside, he describes “the mockingbird trilled a note from where it perched
upon the hand of the moonlit Founder, flipping its moon-mad tail…, heard it
trill behind me” (134). After this, he describes the lighting in a particularly
interesting way: “The street lamps glowed brilliant in the moonlit dream of the
campus, each light serene in its cage of shadows” (134). Normally, light
usually takes over darkness and hides it, but in this quote, the narrator shows
that the darkness (shadows) is covering (“caging”) the light, or in other
words, society covering up the truth. However, the narrator switches around
what is represented by light and what is represented by the dark: the black
race is represented by light, and the darkness is represented by the white race
(society in general), showing that the white society is covering up and trying
to hide the black race’s true identity (making them hold true to the stereotypical
black community). This quote also implies the potential that the black race
has, or in this case the black students have, and that this potential is confined
by the schools ideals, and how the black race is held like a caged animal in a
white society.
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