Thursday, May 5, 2011

Blog Post #6 - Invisible Man

With the narrator's adept ability of public speaking and persuasion, he is effectively able to rile up a crowd during an eviction to a resistance. It is at this point which Brother Jack notices him and wishes to hire him. He accepts and eventually becomes a public speaker on behalf of The Brotherhood.

It is at this point which the narrator no longer has to deal with poverty. He is slowly more and more well-off and he is also being educated. Despite this we will see that this does not free him from the social injustices and systematic racism, thus deconstructing Booker T. Washington's philosophy.

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