Friday, May 31, 2019
Stereotypes and Stereotyping in Invisble Man :: Invisible Man Essays
  Powerful Stereotypes in Invisble Man       Ellison creates many stereotypes of African Americans of his time. He uses  this to bring less informed readers to  visit certain characters motives,  thoughts, and reasoning. By using each personality of an African American in  extremes, Ellison adds passion to the novel, a passion that would not be there  if he would let individualism into his characters. Individualism, or lack there  of is also significant to the novel. It supports his view of an anti-racial  America, because by using stereotypes he makes his characters racial these are  the characters that the Americans misunderstand and abominate.    Dr. Bledsoe is the  uninventive submissive African American. He seemingly is  peremptory, but this is just a façade. Though all of the African Americans in  his community hold him in a high regard, he has no such respect in the  white-mans world. College students tell stories about how when in the north,  he is calle   d Mr. Doctor Bledsoe. Yet in his letter  turn to to Mr. Emerson, he  ended the letter with, I am your humble servant. It is this cowardly  submission that Bledsoe uses to gain power. He enjoys what little power he has  in the African American community, so much in fact that he says that he would  rather see every black man in the country lynched than  deliver up his power.    Ras the Exhorter (later the Destroyer) is the stereotypical black  supremacist. One of the most memorable characters to me, Ras battles for social  equality literally. Literally meaning prince in one of Ethiopias languages and  mimicking the  just of Ra, the Egyptian sun God, Ras encompasses the  stereotypical black-nationalist. By using these allusions, Ellison is  establishing the characters personality even before he acts. Rass philosophy,  one that was unorthodox at the time of publishing, is that blacks should  dangle  off oppression and prejudice by destroying the ability of white men to control  them   . This inevitably leads to violence. This anti-segregation from blacks was  unheard of.    These two offer the reader a  instinct of variety and contrast. Both causes  conflict with the Invisible Man, yet they also offer an inspiration and wisdom.  Bledsoe taught him to not be so naïve, even to his own people.  
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