Wednesday, May 9, 2012

A Whole New Level

Whenever given a final chance at life, it snaps right back with a brick to the head. This is the particular situation of the narrator of Invisible Man. He has been sent to New York and all he found out was that Bledsoe simply wanted him as far away as possible. He had done nothing wrong but simply be the individual that people like Bledsoe detest. He is now in real deep shit.
Mr. Emerson's son is a symbol of something that one might call "scrub". He is the little robot working for his father and controlled by everything his father does. He can't really express his ideas in a way that the narrator can understand. He stammers with ideas to the point to making the narrator angry and uncomfortable. But he does have good heart which is something that is found very rarely in New York and much less corporation as big as that of Mr. Emerson. His tone goes from nonchalant to disdainful and he is extremely formal. But he lacks that ability to deliver an idea well which only made the harsh message from Bledsoe to Emerson even harsher for the narrator. His only good move to the situation is creating the option for the narrator to go to another college on page 183. And that may even foreshadow the idea that he just might get into some new college like Harvard. He certainly has the skills and the "ambition" (P184) to make it though even in a white school.
The last sentence of the chapter foreshadows a series of things that may or may not happen. Hey may decide to steer his life around and destroy everything around him starting with Bledsoe. Depending on how much money he actually has, he will go back home, or have to stay in New York until he actually does. Even though that may be his original play, it's very possible that he will choose to stay in New York for good, work until he has enough money to pay for a better college, and start a new life in the big apple. But this is a very critical moment that will decide what he will do in his life. And New York is the perfect symbol for a change in life.

The Situation That Never Sleeps

A simple person coming to the rage of a city like New York can have strong advantages, disadvantages, and plenty of surprises. Now, even though the Big Apple has been also nicknamed "The land of opportunity", the narrator of Invisible Man still finds himself trapped within his own world that is still connected to Bledsoe. He is letting this man take over his life. He certainly hates himself for letting him control him and with good reason. But he is viewing the world as a very limited place for a black man like him. Even though he just saw a black policeman direct the traffic of white people "as though it was the most natural thing in the world"(P159). Maybe the opportunities in this city are bigger than he may think.
He may very well figure out by himself sooner or later that he can do whatever he wants in this new world. But this small light is dimmed by the two intimidating cops standing beside the possible riot in page 160. They tell him to take care of himself but they still seem intimidating for some reason. This brings the idea of seeming versus being. They seem intimidating considering that he has no reason to trust cops since the ones back home are just too agressive. But they may have nothing really against him. Just because the ask "You sure?" and slightly treating him like an idiot does not make it a threat. But he still interprets it as one. Maybe these are just New York cops being New York cops.
Even though he has been rejected from several secretaries now, his hopes do not fade. He now feels equal to any other person walking along the street. The only difference now is the size of his wallet and everyone else's and even that makes very little difference. Such politeness is unmistakably a nonchalant tone. Even though this is an aggressive city, there is something smooth and calm about it that makes it ironic to the sight. But after a while, he realizes that his is standing on unstable ground and it could collapse on him at any moment. He is afraid in a land designed for people like him who come in without a job. He is afraid of the different and of what he does not know. But even though home may be harsh and the city even, he may find himself in a far better condition than he expected.

Mad With Power

Extreme abuse of power come when someone has done an extreme effort to gain such authority or simply has had it all their lives and assumes that it is their right to keep that authority and use it at their advantage. This is the rant that Bledsoe goes into in chapter 6 of Invisible Man. There is no doubt that his tone is patronizing through the entire rant and that he had little reason to scold the narrator to the point of putting himself in jeopardy of loosing his entire power. He simply underestimated the guts of the narrator to go up to him and fight back. But the narrator did not know that this was the man that had far more control than he did in just about every single aspect. He could kick him out of the school, and create his own platform to do just about whatever he wanted with him. But every man with power is afraid of loosing it. And when he was jeopardized with loosing it, he decided to take it easy. He went from formal to familiar register but his tone remained patronizing even when slowing down. But he never apologized. It would have been too far of a humiliation.
      It might be a very common thing in this particular part of the south and this particular time era. But there is nothing more ironic than a black man calling another one a nigger. It is an insult to the entire black community to use that word. But this is not Bledsoe showing his superiority but more of a sign of weakness that he is nothing more than a cheap and overpowered black man. 
Another piece of irony is "Power doesn't have to show off. Power is confident, self-assuring, self-starting and self-stopping, self-warning and self-justifying." (P.142) He just described power as being everything that he would like it to be instead of what it really is. When a person goes mad with power, there is no stopping that person and there is will cross any barrier to expand. He has demonstrated that though his entire ten minute rant. He may regret it after sending the narrator to New York or it may be another abuse of power and lie to get him out of the way. This is the last piece of evidence that demonstrates Bledsoe really does have the ability to create his own platform and control his own world.

Sightless

Many times, there will be someone that will give much even though he does not have much to give. This is the case of Homer A. Barbee.  He may not be a developed character but he is a small symbol of inspiration for the narrator. But even though he may not be very bright, he is also the "wise man" of every story whether he may be blind or missing a leg.
Ellison uses this character to strengthen the title of the book. To Barbee, everyone is completely invisible. And he has been the invisible one that everyone has paid little attention to until now. So even though he has made himself seen in his speech, everyone else are nothing to him in terms of sight.
Whenever attempting to make a speech to move people, the best possible register is familiar or ceremonial. Barbee used a mixture of both with excellent results. "And of course, you all know the story" (P130) is nothing shorts of familiar register and "how rich and poor, black and white, young and old, all came to pay their homage" on the same page goes with ceremonial. He is doing everything he can to connect with the public to a time when everything was completely equal. By using an optimistic and disdainful tone, he is easily able to be heard.
A "Black-draped coffin"(P 131) is a symbol of a dark feeling. In the case of the black men working which Barbee describes, they feel that cold feeling that they may one day become slaves again. This means that what we now all "Jim Crow laws" would one day pull them back into becoming a minority. Now, his tone goes into gloomy giving him the most powerful piece of attention possible. Being an old man also gives that impression that he has witnessed all that he is talking about. He is the reference of how times were and he has done a good job in demonstrating it.
It is almost ironic how a man can live in such a dark world of blindness but always keep his head up even though he does not see what he's doing it to. Barbee may very well be the narrator's foil at this point. The narrator makes no inspiring speeches, and makes no effort to support the black community he lives in. And out of all, he has no physical or mental conditions that hold him back to being great and admired. So at the moment, he is far more invisible to the public than this blind man.