Skip to main content

North and South...and yams

One of the most significant transitions undergone by the narrator in Invisible Man is his move from the South to New York. In New York, he tries to rid himself of his southern identity, and recreate himself as a sophisticated northerner. However, despite his greatest efforts, the narrator cannot manage to redefine himself because of one thing: nostalgia. Though he isn't fully aware of it, the narrator is extremely emotionally attached to the South, and this prevents him from developing into the man he wants to be.

The narrator's nostalgia pops up a few times while he's in New York. He dearly wants to eat the southern-style breakfast at the diner, even though he declines. He reminisces on his times in college, and then we get the yam scene, the most symbolic of all. It's snowing when he's eating the yams, which is an exclusively northern form of precipitation. Yams are primarily a southern food, and the flavor and scent of the yams brings back forgotten memories of his youth and family back home. These nostalgic memories mesh with the narrator's current reality, creating a jumble of images that clash - the cold air, his childhood, yams, yams, and more yams.

The narrator has tried so hard to separate his love of the South from his ambitions in the North, but the yams overwhelm him. As he bites into his last yam, he realizes it is frostbitten. The North and South cannot coexist: the yams don't belong in the snow. As long as the narrator tries to be both northern and southern, he cannot succeed. The frostbitten yam helps him recognize this, and shocks him into reality. The past is the past: it is time for him to move on. By spitting out the frostbitten yam, he is ridding himself of his nostalgia and severing his ties to his home. He then walks around the corner and finally has his first success as a northerner. Would he have been able to move past his identity crisis without the aid of the yams? Or would he have grown old wallowing in his failure?

Comments

  1. And yet, his "first success as a northerner" entails a deep identification with the elderly couple *as* southerners who remind him of his grandparents. This irony is redoubled when Jack, upon "hiring" him, declares that to work for the Brotherhood he'll have to sever ties with his family. The narrator's complicated relationship with his southern roots (ha ha) does not completely disappear when he assumes this literally new northern identity (including a new name, new wardrobe, no family, etc.).

    ReplyDelete
  2. I found the yam scene to be quite interesting to reflect on because I do think that we see a shift in his view of the north and south. As he has been in the north, he has overall struggled to understand who he is. He came as a college student looking for a job, but so much has happened to change who he is and his outlook. As you pointed out, the narrator has struggled with his southern identity in the north. In this scene, he seems to finally be able to clear his mind of the north vs. south turmoil going on in his head. I find it somewhat disappointing that just as the narrator's identity had another shift and he began to discover who he is, the brotherhood comes and basically starts to erase it all. At the same time, I am interested in how his time at the brotherhood goes, and whether he will allow his identity to be changed or if he will start to rebel against the brotherhood leaders.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I like this interpretation of the end of the yams scene as severing ties with his southern past (or at least an attempt to) because it segues into the next phase of the narrator's life very interestingly with the emergence of Brother Jack and the new job opportunity he has that comes with a whole new identity. This really is the ultimate severing of the narrator from the past, but as he continues on his journey there are brief glimpses of sadness and loneliness that the narrator lets us in on, making me wonder if he really can sever himself from the past.

    ReplyDelete
  4. In Invisible Man, identity is a central concept that serves to ground someone and connect them to the world around them. Does the narrator's rejecting of the old parts of his identity to take on a fake new one signify his transition into an invisible man who exists only as others see him?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

How Disney perpetuates voodoo stereotypes

In the opening chapters of Mumbo Jumbo , we've been introduced to Papa DaBas, a voodoo priest. In class we talked a bit about the largely negatively perception of voodoo in America. This immediately made me think of the Disney princess film, The Princess and the Frog . This movie is set in New Orleans, and follows a princess who falls in love, blah blah blah...but the villain is a voodoo-practicing witch doctor, Dr. Facilier.  I found it really interesting to look back at Dr. Facilier's character after discussing the American perception of voodoo, because Dr. Facilier is portrayed as a man of pure evil (here's a picture if you haven't seen the movie to show how creepy he is). His soul belongs to evil loas (his "friends on the other side", as he calls them), and he uses their power to achieve his greedy  goals, convincing the loas to continue working with him by feeding them the souls of innocent victims. He's manipulative and extremely powerful.  ...

Final thoughts

 Before I get into this, I want to start by pointing out that Jill was #1 on my most likely to die list, and she is the one who died. It feels wrong to congratulate myself, but I am a little bit proud. The ending was quite satisfying. It felt almost too good and peaceful for the end of such a wild and tragic novel. Nearly the entire group survived, they moved on from their ghosts of the past, and they have great resources that they can begin their Earthseed community with. I'm a little upset that Lauren is still in a relationship with Bankole, but it's good that there are so many relationships within their community as they plan for the future. The most surprising part of the ending was when Lauren discovered that Greyson, Emery, and their kids are all sharers. I was not expecting this at all, because sharing was Lauren's most unique trait. However, it does alienate her less from the rest of the group, and it makes the former slaves more united with the rest of the group. T...

'Hard-boiled': a post about egg metaphors

"It is awfully easy to be hard-boiled about everything in the daytime, but at night it is another thing." This line uttered by Jake is fascinating to me, and not only because he compares himself to a cooked egg. First of all, this is one of the few scenes where we see Jake admitting that he has any emotions - he spends the majority of the novel trying to be nonchalant and as stereotypically masculine as possible. We mentioned in class that a perk of Hemingway's bland style is that emotional breakthroughs are much more significant. We experience one of those breakthroughs here, where Jake is finally admitting that his personality and attitude is a façade that he hides behind. However, the thing I really want to talk about is the term 'hard-boiled' and why I think it's such an accurate description of Jake. So, I'm assuming we're all familiar with hard-boiled eggs. Hard shells, soft insides, cooked in pots of boiling water. By calling himself hard-boiled,...