How does the motif of invisibility figure most prominently in the scene at Golden Day in Chapter 3 of Invisible Man?

A.The veteran treating Mr. Norton has used his invisibility to undermine social expectations of him.
B.Mr. Norton disappears into the crowd, now the most invisible person in a room full of African Americans.
C.The encounter with Trueblood has ended, and his disappearance allows the narrator to relax and calm down.
D.The narrator feels invisible among a crowd of African American people after spending time with the white man.
E.The college has disappeared from sight, indicating that beauty and peace have also gone from the narrator's life.

How does Ellison's use of point of view in chapters 2 and 3 of Invisible Man affect the reader's understanding of the narrator?

A.The narrator's jadedness allows the reader to infer that he no longer cares about the college.
B.The narrator's mocking tone shows the reader that he finds the events of his college days distasteful.
C.The narrator's distance from the scenes he describes makes them less important in the overall context of the book.
D.The narrator's closeness to the upsetting events helps the reader identify more closely with the injustices he faces.
E.The narrator's nostalgic tone indicates that his experiences at college were all for the best, no matter what he once felt.

How does the style of Invisible Man connect to the characterization of the narrator?

A.The choppy style characterizes this time in the narrator's life as out-of-control and terrifying.
B.The erudite style highlights the characterization of the narrator as a man ahead of his time.
C.The changing style illustrates the different faces the narrator had to put on for different audiences.
D.The eloquent style demonstrates the nostalgia the narrator still has for the events of his childhood.
E.The dispassionate style creates a more academic tone that makes the narrator's claims seem plausible.How does the motif of invisibility figure most prominently in the scene at Golden Day in Chapter 3 of Invisible Man?

A.The veteran treating Mr. Norton has used his invisibility to undermine social expectations of him.
B.Mr. Norton disappears into the crowd, now the most invisible person in a room full of African Americans.
C.The encounter with Trueblood has ended, and his disappearance allows the narrator to relax and calm down.
D.The narrator feels invisible among a crowd of African American people after spending time with the white man.
E.The college has disappeared from sight, indicating that beauty and peace have also gone from the narrator's life.

How does Ellison's use of point of view in chapters 2 and 3 of Invisible Man affect the reader's understanding of the narrator?

A.The narrator's jadedness allows the reader to infer that he no longer cares about the college.
B.The narrator's mocking tone shows the reader that he finds the events of his college days distasteful.
C.The narrator's distance from the scenes he describes makes them less important in the overall context of the book.
D.The narrator's closeness to the upsetting events helps the reader identify more closely with the injustices he faces.
E.The narrator's nostalgic tone indicates that his experiences at college were all for the best, no matter what he once felt.

How does the style of Invisible Man connect to the characterization of the narrator?

A.The choppy style characterizes this time in the narrator's life as out-of-control and terrifying.
B.The erudite style highlights the characterization of the narrator as a man ahead of his time.
C.The changing style illustrates the different faces the narrator had to put on for different audiences.
D.The eloquent style demonstrates the nostalgia the narrator still has for the events of his childhood.
E.The dispassionate style creates a more academic tone that makes the narrator's claims seem plausible.

A. The erudite style highlights the characterization of the narrator as a man ahead of his time.