Invisible Man Internal Conflict

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Invisible man tells us about the conflicts that the narrator has to go through as he lives his life. He finds that each society is different and is trying to change him. The narrator runs into conflict as he tries to find his identity when he has external conflict, when he is working in New York, and when he joins the brotherhood. The narrator has conflict in finding his identity from those around him. He is trying to find is identity as he tries to fit in with society. As he goes on and solves his own conflicts he finds that he is blind of what is going on. Throughout the book as he continues to solve his conflicts he keeps a briefcase that carries all of the mementos when he learns a lesson. This gives him an identity as the mementos are his lessons that brought him to finding his identity. A second conflict …show more content…

Like the bodiless heads you see sometimes in circus sideshows, it is as though I have been surrounded by mirrors of hard, distorting glass. When they approach me, they see only my surroundings, themselves or figments of their imagination, indeed, everything and anything except me.” (Ellison) Another conflict is others against him. People are afraid of his existence. The narrator has the ability to make speeches that motivate people. The people around him think that it is a problem to the other character’s identity. The second conflict the narrator has in finding his identity was when he was working in New York. The narrator tries to fit into the white society and tries to find his identity there. He goes to New York to try and find a job. He finds works at the Liberty Paint plant and finds an identity there. He finds that the white need him there to do labor but also making the place mixed as well. In the end, he is only used as a tool to the company. This tells us that the narrator continues to think that if he joins that white society he will find an identity in