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The Narrator
The narrator's grandparents were freed slaves who believed they were
separate but equal after the Civil War. His grandfather lived a meek and quiet
life after being freed. However, on his deathbed, he tells the narrator's father
that the lives of black Americans are a 'war' and that he himself feels like a
traitor. He counsels the narrator's father to undermine the whites with 'yeses'
and 'grins.' He advises his family to 'agree 'em
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actually offering his own 'fatherly advice.' He is telling the
narrator to define his own identity, while simult aneously defining it for him.
The narrator is on an archetypal journey. Like thousands of black
Americans, he joins the Great Migration North looking for freedom. He
marvels at the variety and vibrancy of Harlem. He sees Ras making an
inflammatory speech in the street calling the b lack Harlem residents to drive
out the whites,
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