Arnold Friend, the antagonist in Joyce Carol Oates’s story “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” represents the devil who arrives to bring Connie to the underworld. For example, his unusual appearance implies that he is an inhuman being, unlike what he wants to lead on. As he struggles to walk from his car to the front door, Connie notes that “his whole face was a mask... tanned down to his throat...as if he had..makeup on..but had forgotten about his throat”(5). Arnold Friend covers his demonic features in order to pass as a teenager with the intention of deceiving Connie into leaving with him.
The impressment of American sailors to forcefully be a part of the Royal Navy sparked tensions between the British. Under the British authority, the Royal Navy took unaware sailors from American merchant ships. The justification of impressment was based on the concept of British Americans citizenship. Sailors were subject to impressment due to the lack of evidence of citizenship and previous citizenship from the motherland. The American seamen were required to serve on behalf of the British army to fight against the United States.
In “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” it is a thrilling short story leaving the reader on the edge of their seat wondering what happened. It was published in 1966. Some other works written by Joyce Carol Oates are “Wonderland,” and “In the Region of Ice.” “Oates concerns herself with the formulation of the American dream and how it has changed” (Mann and Benson).
The line comes from the Joyce Carol Oates' story "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? " I believe the author is referring to how her family and her friend perceive here. Connie sees herself while at home as dull and quiet compared to the rebellious and outgoing look she presents to her friends. It appears that that neither groups, family or friends, know who she really is. I believe its natural for you to act one way with you friends and another way with your family.
Where Are You Going Where Have You Been? By Joyce Carol Oates Psychoanalytic Criticism Question How are id, ego and superego represented in “Where Are You Going? Where Have You Been?” By Joyce Carol Oates?
In the essay, “A Literature of Place”, by Barry Lopez focuses on the topic of human relationships with nature. He believes human imagination is shaped by the architectures it encounters within life. Lopez first starts his essay with the statement that geography is a shaping force for humans. This shaping force is what creates our imagination; the shaping force is found within nature. Everything humans see within nature is remembered, thus creating new ideas and thoughts for our imagination.
When reading a few of Flannery O’Connor’s stories, one cannot help but make a connection with her intensive stories and those of a television show. Both take mostly everyday people and exaggerate them into an absurd nature. Her stories and television shows use shock factors to draw in readers and viewers, respectively. While television shows tend to vary in themes and messages, Flannery O’Connor’s short stories tend to be focused on a few limited messages and themes. Television shows are mostly mindless channels of entertainment, Flannery O’Connor uses her characters not only to entertain, but to also cause readers to reflect inward and think.
The Imagery used in Oats's story “Where are you going, Where have you been?” describes an internal shift in Connie causing a change in her character. The Credo reference describes the main function of imagery as “the main function of imagery is to help people reason and solve problems by allowing them to predict the outcome of a given action. ”(Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science). Using imagery helps readers understand and connect the
Oates reminisces back to when she was a child wandering the fields and abandoned buildings behind her home. As she explores these abandoned structures, she takes notice of the “remnants of a lost household” within this “absolute emptiness of a house whose
In her short story "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?", Joyce Carol Oates utilizes a variety of literary devices to strengthen the story in its entirety. This short story is essentially about a 16-year-old girl named Connie and the conflict between her desire to be mature and her desire to remain an adolescent. Throughout the story, the audience sees this conflict through her words in addition to through her behavior. The audience is also introduced to Arnold Friend, a rather peculiar man, who essentially kidnaps her. This short story by Joyce Carol Oates functions and is additionally meaningful because of her usage of literary devices.
The story “Where is Here” ,written by Joyce Oates, begins when a man goes to look at the house he grew up in. He knocks on the door and the dad invites him in, but he declines and just walks around the outer parts of the house. While he is walking outside, the mom of the house tells him to come inside and walk around. The house brings back many good and bad memories that help the reader piece together the strange man's past. The short story, “Where is Here,” has a bleak setting, tortured characters, and supernatural events which help make it an American gothic piece.
In brief, “Where is Here?” illustrates an encounter between an unexpected visitor and a family of four, living "in a quiet residential neighborhood" (325). On a dark evening, a stranger comes to visit the family, explaining that he used to live there as a child. He asks to lure around their home as he passes the father’s offer inside. The mother has mixed feelings of sympathy and uneasiness, while the father is cautious about his whereabouts actions outside.
Nature is easily projected onto, as it allows for a sense of peacefulness and escapism. Due to its ability to evoke an emotional reaction from the masses, many writers have glorified it through various methods, including describing its endless beauty and utilizing it as a symbol for spirituality. Along with authors, artists also show great respect and admiration for nature through paintings of grandiose landscapes. These tributes disseminate a fixed interpretation of the natural world, one full of meaning and other worldly connections. In “Against Nature,” Joyce Carol Oates strips away this guise given to the environment and replaces it with a harsher reality.
The universe of names as objects of research does not have limits. The interest in names can be linguistic or philosophical, theoretical or practical, legal or political, ethnographic or religious; however, an analysis of characters’ names in Harry Potter from all these perspectives would be practically impossible. In order to narrow down the scope of this research, the data collected, that is, some characters’ names, will be described from the point of view of etymology – the study of the origin and history of words and their meanings (Pinker, 1999:24); semantics –the study of meanings as expressed through language (ibid.). Another perspective from which names can be analyzed is metaphorical level will be to explore how, names meaning is different
Hour of Freedom “The Story of an Hour” is a short story written by Kate Chopin. It details a wife named Mrs. Louise Mallard, who struggles with a heart condition. After learning of her husband, Brentley Mallard’s death in a railroad accident, Mrs. Mallard deals with grief in many stages. Chopin incorporates many literary devices throughout “The Story of an Hour,” but imagery is the most evident.