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Invisible Man, The

noun

  1. a novel (1897) by H.G. Wells.
  2. a novel (1952) by Ralph Ellison.


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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

This success was followed by a wave of Universal horror movies that shaped the 20th century’s nightmares: The Mummy, Bride of Frankenstein, The Invisible Man, The Wolf Man, The Black Cat, The Old Dark House, and many more.

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Opening my tattered copy of “Invisible Man,” the same one I carried with me up those manor house steps more than half my life ago, my notes appear as palimpsest: layers of thinking and rethinking, circles and underlines, question marks and exclamation points written in a riot of pencil and ink.

From

Driskell could be said to have mirrored what Ralph Ellison probed in his indispensable novel, “The Invisible Man”: the controlling, suffocating power of social and cultural invisibility.

From

In Ralph Ellison’s “the Invisible Man,” the black protagonist in the book lamented his problem, “It’s not that I am invisible, it is that you refuse to see me.”

From

Additionally, some studios — including Disney and Universal — have bumped up the digital release dates of several titles, such as the Elisabeth Moss thriller “Invisible Man,” the latest adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Emma” and animated juggernaut “Frozen 2.”

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