As the Invisible Man and Mr. Norton were on their way to Jim
Trueblood’s house, The Invisible Man began to recall the time in his life where
he met Trueblood. He thought that Trueblood was “a good singer” and remembered
how “he was brought up along with the members of a country quartet to sing what
the officials called 'their primitive spirituals”' (47). He recalled being “embarrassed
by the earthy harmonies they sang”, and how he “dared not to laugh at the
crude, high, plaintively animal sounds Jim Trueblood made” (47). Ellison
describes Trueblood’s singing in this way to show how the white men saw him as primitive, crude, and even animalistic. This led both the officials and the
Invisible man to develop hatred towards the “peasants”, or black belt people.
The officials were not familiar with the style of singing, and were unable to
relate that to themselves in any way. What the officials were unable to
understand, and the Invisible man could only figure out after his pre-invisible
days, was that they actually feared the “peasants”. They were afraid of the
push pull relationship that they were involved in, where the school was trying
to “pull them up”, and the “peasants” were pulling them down (47).
6-Even though there was a misinterpretation at one point with "Ellison describes Trueblood’s singing in this way to show how the white men saw him as primitive, crude, and even animalistic" because it was the students of the college who saw him that way, you did point out the push-pull relationship. Deepen you analysis on the nature of this fear and its own element of power within the black community.
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