Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Invisible Man Questions Part 2

Chapter 3

1.  The significance of the wide range of professions that the insane men at the Golden Day used to practice is that this gives us a sense of the subjection these men endure regardless of life experience.

2.

3. The patients find that kicking Supercargo in therapeutic because they have the sense of freedom when rebelling against authority.

4. The veteran call the narrator invisible because the narrator is stricken with a blindness and the doctor invested his identity so that many people can appreciated him.

Chapter 4

1. The narrator's inner tension is that he feels that the school is being threatened.
2. The narrator hate Trueblood and the people at the Golden Day because it destroyed the narrator's chances at college and acceptance into white society. Also, the narrator  disapprove of what Trueblood did to his daughter.

3. The effect of comparing the campus building to an ''old phantation manor house'' is that it brings back the whole aura of slavery.

4. He basically followed the path pointed to him by white culture; he still dislike the black community.

5. It symbolize the image that many blacks have in themselves living in a society appropriated by whites.

Chapter 5

1. The imagery of the looming moon has been cracked and distorted.

2. The tone of the two paragraphs are very serious and somber.

3. The rhetorical effect of the intalicized passage is that he had a second thought about freedom.

4. Dr. Bledsoe's position seems natural. The narrator is started to understand that by touching a white man was attainable.

5. Barbee is described as Buddha like, but the shocking part is that he is blind. By creating an allusion for the audience to see, it is the only hope to believe.

6. '' Coal black like a reluctant and so literacy tear'' is an example of a simile.

7. It effects the narrator with the speech of the Reverend Barbee and it touches to the word '' black'' probably as a conspiracy.

8. He spend much of his time talking about the vision of the Founder and explained how it still exist.

9. The narrator sees Barbee very stumble as his glasses collapsed. The narrator realizes that Barbee is fully blind.

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