1. The Invisible Man's Quest for Identity
" (215) the narrator expresses his erupted identification with the black race of the South. ... But following the Communist theory "individuals [...] don't count" (236) for the Brotherhood whose leader Brother Jack, described as a very authoritative person "who snap[s] his orders like a general" (268), requires the invisible man to "accept discipline" (381) subordinating to the Brotherhood's aims - just as subservience has been demanded by Dr Bledsoe. ...
- Word Count: 2972
- Approx Pages: 12
- Has Bibliography