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用户868267
The Invisible Man is actually about the situation of each of us: others
only focus on the label of "black", and no one wants to know
how he thinks or feels, so he becomes "transparent". Walking
on the street is like air, and even if mixed into an organization, it
can only be used as a tool. The most touching thing in the book is his
plain words in the basement: "Invisible, let me see through the
visible falsehood." Society only wants to look at labels, and real
dialogue cannot begin. He opened 1369 light bulbs in one breath, just to
use the light to tell himself: I really exist. The novel did not provide
a standard answer until the end. The protagonist walks from south to
north, from obedience to rebellion, just wanting to fight for the right
to speak up about 'who am I'. The story stops in the basement, but he
decides to 'go out and take responsibility' - meaning not to be a hero,
but to refuse to be defined by a simple sentence again. Up to now,
algorithms and social networks are constantly giving us new labels,
encouraging us to play a "easy to understand" persona. We are
actually becoming transparent too. The value of books is to remind us
that in order to be seen by others, we must first see ourselves in their
entirety and not leave ourselves with only one label.
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