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In Defense Of Dr. Bledsoe's The Invisible Man

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In the Invisible Man, Dr. Bledsoe was at first someone the narrator admired. Dr. Bledsoe publicly accommodates his white benefactors, however privately he is manipulating their interest in order to future his means and those of the college. One day the narrator got the honor of having Mr. Norton drive him around campus. While on their adventure, they ran into a disgraced member of the community, Jim Trueblood, who is rumored to have impregnated both his wife and daughter. In Jim Trueblood defense he gives a log description of the dream which made him commit this act of incest. After hearing about this Mr. Norton feels faint, so the narrator takes him to the Golden Day Brothel to get a drink. On this day, mental patients were visiting the bar

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