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Ralph Ellison’s, Invisible Man, is an elevated and acclaimed record of an African American’s journey through contemporary America in search of success, companionship, and finally, himself. ... I found three such ideas in Ellison’s Invisible Man. ... Ellison uses the character Brother Jack, the leader of the Brotherhood, to point out the failure of abstract beliefs to address the real problem of the African American. ... I see Ellison’s treatment of the Brotherhood is largely a critique of the poor treatment that he believed the African American community had received from communism, and Jack with his red hair seems to symbolize this betrayal. ...
Ras the Exhorter is a powerful figure, who seems to incorporate Ellison’s fears for the future of the civil rights battle in America. ... Ellison never directly comments on the song throughout the novel.
Approximate Word count = 1591 Approximate Pages = 6.4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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