The novel the invisible man is the story of a man who is searching for his happenings coming up and now believes he is invisible to society. The narrator makes clear that he is invisible clearly because people do not really see him . He takes a glance back into his early stage in life, recalling his judgment. He moves back to add that he goes into hiding underground, utilizing electricity from a Power Plant right around his apartment . The narrator describes something he visioned while he was exploring his days of slavery back in the day. He his introduced in an intangible voice , someone who has lost his specification through the society . The narrator casts back on an before time period of the 20th century, encouraging that a new …show more content…
But as he progresses as a student the denials of the arrangement become more clear it is not clear if whites wish for him to advance or not. The narrator’s worldview has become more complex. Narrator puts a name to the intention of his speech. At the time the narrator did not feel humble, yet rather knew thus far being humble was the thing to tell the white people . The narrator later begins to enroll into an unknown black college. The college seems as good as magical place where the narrator can move on and earn a top spot in the black society. The narrator has been stated the glory of chauffeuring one of the schools trustees a white man named Mr Norton . When driving the narrator takes him into an strange area near campus. Norton tells him to stop the car and he gets out to talk with a sharecropper named Jim Trueblood …show more content…
He meets Tod Clifton a very smart and skilled member of the Brotherhood. Clifton and the narrator soon starts fighting against Ras the Exhorter a black nationalist who believes that blacks should not collab with whites. Very soon the narrator starts to become a famous speaker. Even though things set in. The narrator finds a note telling him that he is climbing up too quickly. Even awful another Brotherhood member named Wrestrum accuses the narrator of using the Brotherhood for his own physical gain. The Brotherhood suspends the narrator until the charges are opened up and to get him to lecture downtown on the “Woman Question.” Downtown, the narrator meets a woman who convinces him to come back to her apartment. They spend the night with each other and the narrator becomes afraid that it will be