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In paragraph 7, the narrator reveals his feelings about the events in town. Explain what you can infer about his character from this revelation and discuss how the details the narrator supplies help to advance the plot

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The narrator of Ralph Ellison's The Invisible Man gives his thoughts on the events in town in paragraph 7.

The narrator's character is indicated or may be inferred from this statement to be naïve.

The narrative's narrator (the "Invisible Man") is a bewildered, ignorant young man whose quest for meaning and identification as a black man in white America drives him into a series of dangerous circumstances.

Despite having a name, he remains nameless and "invisible" throughout the novel.

What literary evidence supports the preceding?

When the narrator arrives in New York, he takes the train to Harlem and is startled by the number of black people there.

He is especially surprised to see an enraged black man with a West Indian accent confronting a group of black males on the street without being captured.

After passing the group, the narrator seeks directions from two white police officers to Men's House, where he registers, walks to his room, and pulls out his package of letters to arrange his job search.

Learn more about inference:

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