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Dr Bledsoe Berates The Narrator In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man

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In of Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison, Dr. Bledsoe berates the narrator for showing Mr. Norton an unfiltered view of the lives of African Americans. The narrator is expelled from school, despite his attempts to lie. In response to the narrator’s protests, Bledsoe proceeds to lecture and reprimand the young man. Through juxtaposing internal and external power, Ellison reveals the imbalance of powers both between and within races. As he commences his lecture, Bledsoe points to his internal power as he explains to the narrator that he is the one who is in control of the school, not the whites. He empowers himself internally through confidence in himself whilst remaining undetected from the exterior. The internal power the Bledsoe contains is
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