Foreshadowing the dispute between Ras and the
Brotherhood in his earlier speech, the
invisible man describes the conflict simply as “men walking down opposite sides
of the street”; where once shots are fired the men begin to “fight among [themselves]”
when in reality there is a “third party” “scoundrel running down the middle”
shooting. Bringing to question, who is the real “scoundrel”?
Thus far in the novel the invisible man has assumed that the
enemy was everyone who was against his brotherhood; bringing to question what
brotherhood should the invisible man belong to and what is a true brother? In knowing
who his brother is the invisible man will be able to determine who is against
him. Ras defines a brother as someone of “same color”. This simple proclamation
goes against the brotherhood that the invisible man currently belongs to. The “brotherhood”
defines a brother as someone who shares in the same views. This definition
immediately creates irony because the “brotherhood” changes the views of new members
to match their own. By changing the view of its members the Brotherhood is
turning “black against black”, it is turning men who are fighting for the same
cause against one another. Ras points this idea out to the invisible man by
describing him as a “black mahn” who denies his own people and denies “his own
mama”. Ras shows the invisible man that the “third party” is the “white
enslaver” by saying that white people “don’t have to be allies with no black
people. They get what they wahnt, they turn against you”. He uses this to
explain that this is a movement for black freedom; the whites already have
their freedom in society, and the only reason for them to join the black
journey towards freedom is to destroy it.
The invisible man believes that Ras is trying to corrupt him
through these examples when in reality Ras is trying to awaken him. Ras had
given himself the name of Ras the Exhorter for the particular reason that to
exhort means to give advice or to give warnings. He is trying to warn the
invisible man of the “corrupt ideology” found in the brotherhood. He is trying
to show the invisible man that through his journey for self-acceptance and
freedom he has gone back instead of forward. He is “a black traitor to the
black people” and has fallen for the traps of the white society. In order for
the Invisible man to achieve self-acceptance and freedom he needs to realize
his “black duty” and accept his heritage instead of trying to cover it up in white
poison.
Make sure to give page numbers for the quotes. There is a interpretation connection that is a little off. The third party down the middle are those that cause chaos for change to wake those who are half blind. 6
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