This section contains 2,038 words (approx. 6 pages at 400 words per page) |
In the following excerpt, Schafer explores how Ellison's "invisible man" can be seen as an antihero in search of an identity.
The anti-hero of Invisible Man, though we come to know him intimately, remains nameless. He is no-man and everyman on a modern epic quest, driven by the message his grandfather re veals in a dream: "To Whom It May Concern ... Keep This Nigger-Boy Running." His primary search is for a name—or for the self it symbolizes. During his search he is given another name by the Brotherhood, but it is no help. When he becomes a "brother," he finds that brotherhood does not clarify his inner mysteries.
In creating his anti-hero, Ellison builds on epic and mythIc conventions. The nameless voyager passes through a series of ordeals or trials to demonstrate his stature. First, he passes through the initiation—rites of our society...
This section contains 2,038 words (approx. 6 pages at 400 words per page) |