Irony In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man

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The narrator is impersonating someone during a chaotic night in Harlem, New York when he walks into a church and sees this quote hanging on a wall. At the beginning of Invisible Man, the speaker expresses his feeling about light. He explains that the only way he knows that he exists, after finding out that he was invisible to the rest of the world, is when he fills his room with light. However, when he enters this church with the saying in front of him, “let there be light,” yet he is dressed up and is successfully portraying someone else, there is irony. His existence is not being proven at that moment in the church. Instead, it is the opposite. He is non-existent or invisible when impersonating someone. There are no special word choices