In Invisible Man, the narrator worries that all African-Americans will
be stereotyped by the actions of just one individual. When he drives Mr. Norton
around, he is worried that the people Mr. Norton sees will influence his
opinion of African-Americans. The narrator is anxious to leave Mr. Trueblood’s
farm because he does not want Mr. Norton to hear Mr. Trueblood’s story. While
Mr. Trueblood is talking he thinks, “How can he tell this to white men, I
thought, when he knows they’ll say that all Negroes do such things? I looked at
the floor, a red mist of anguish before my eyes.” (58). For this same reason, the
narrator does not Mr. Norton to enter the Golden Day and see the shell shocked veterans.
Although he is worried about the misrepresentation of African-American men, he
does not notice the similarities between the white characters he meets.
In Chapter 1 of the novel, the
narrator is humiliated before a large group of white men, including the school
superintendent who he refers to as “All of the town’s big shots” (17). He is
forced to fight other African-American men, but his suffering is treated as
entertainment by the white men. The narrator, beaten and exhausted, then
delivers his speech where he is ridiculed and humiliated. Once he has finished,
he is given a scholarship to the state college for Negroes.
In Chapter 2 of the novel, the
narrator accompanies Mr. Norton and listens to Mr. Trueblood tell Mr. Norton
about how he impregnated his own daughter. The story has an odd effect on Mr.
Norton, most likely because of his relationship with his daughter who passed
away. After the story, Mr. Norton gives Mr. Trueblood 100 dollars, which
confuses the narrator. He fails to see the similarity between his experience
and Mr. Trueblood’s storytelling.
At first glance, Mr. Trueblood’s storytelling
does not seem to play the same role as the narrator’s fighting and speech, but
Mr. Norton’s shock seems to be a result of his obsession with his daughter
rather than his disapproval and disgust of Mr. Trueblood’s actions. He is
intrigued and exclaims, “You did and are unharmed!” and “You have looked upon
chaos and are not destroyed!” (51). He refuses to leave even when the narrator
is uncomfortable and prompts him to go, “I looked at Mr. Norton and stood up,
thinking it was a good time to leave; but he was listening to Trueblood so
intensely he didn’t see me”. Mr. Norton and the superintendent both view the
humiliation of the African-American men as a source for their own
entertainment. Not only would they pay for things like this, Mr. Trueblood
remarks that the Sheriff and other white men would give him food, drink, and
tobacco to tell them the story.
All the white men in the novel share
the same perception on the uniformity of African-American men. In Chapter 1, the
narrator expresses he feels superior to the other “tough guys” in the elevator
with him. Although the narrator notices the difference between him and the
other men, the white men use them for the same purpose: their entertainment.
Mr. Norton shares these views although they manifest subtly. He speaks on the
founder’s role in the college as “a king, or in a sense, of a God” (45). The
vet recognizes this and comments Mr. Norton views the narrator as “a mark on
the scoreboard of your achievement, a thing and not a man, a child, or even
less – a black amorphous thing” (95). The narrator dismisses what the vet has to
say and stays under the control of white men who, in a sense, keep him running.
This is an interesting analysis of Norton within the context of the other white men we've encountered in this book. It is clear that it is the common trend of white men to use Black men as their entertainment. I still am not sure of Norton's intentions though when he gave the money to Trueblood. I'm sure that his experiences with his daughter played a part. Yet, I don't know if he was "thanking" Trueblood necessarily for entertaining him with this incredibly bizarre story. I think it was maybe pity money (a show of his white liberalism)? But I do agree that Norton sees the narrator as just another one of his pawns, another "mark on his scoreboard." Unfortunately, the narrator is in a part of his life where he refuses to see the reality of things when the vet tries to wake him up to reality.
ReplyDeleteThis idea of the white person's perception of the uniformity of African American culture is neatly summed up in the recurring phrase, "your people"--which, you'll recall, also irritated and confused Bigger Thomas, a young man who feels very little sense of himself as being part of a larger collective "people." One of the ways Ellison parodies and undermines this idea in his novel is through the vast diversity of African American characters he presents: does the "people" include both Trueblood *and* Bledsoe? His grandfather and the vet? What about Supercargo? Or the guy who thinks he's Jefferson's grandson? What about Peter Wheatstraw, singing the blues with his cart full of blueprints? Or Mary Rambo? Or Brockway?
ReplyDeleteOne effect of this novel--and I think it's intentional--is that it's difficult if not impossible to paint all the black characters with the same brush. They may have certain things in common, but Ellison continues to stress their differences and distinctiveness throughout.