Sunday, January 19, 2020
Death and Reality in Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? by Joyce Carol Oates :: Where Are You Going Where Have You Been
Death and Reality in "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" by Joyce Carol Oates      Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   Joyce Carol  Oates' "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" is about a young girl's  struggle to escape reality while defying authority and portraying herself as a  beauty queen; ultimately, she is forced back to reality when confronted by a man  who symbolizes her demise. The young girl, Connie, is hell- bent on not becoming  like her mother or sister. She feels she is above them because she is prettier.  She wants to live in a "dream world" where she listens to music all day and  lives with Prince Charming. She does not encounter Prince Charming but is  visited by someone, Arnold Friend, who embodies the soul of something evil.  Arnold Friend symbolizes "Death" in that he is going to take Connie away from  the world she once knew. Even if she is not dead, she will never be the same  person again, and will be dead in spirit. With the incorporation of irony, Oates  illustrates how Connie's self-infatuation, her sole reason for living, is the  reason she is faced with    such a terrible situation possibly ending her life.       Connie is only concerned about her physical appearance. She can be described  as being narcissistic because "she had a quick, nervous giggling habit of  craning her neck to glance into mirror or checking other people's faces to make  sure her own was all right" (Oates 148). Connie wants her life to be different  from everyone else's in her family. She thinks because she is prettier, she is  entitled to much more. She wants to live the "perfect life" in which she finds  the right boy, marries him, and lives happily ever after. This expectation is  nothing less than impossible because she has not experienced love or anything  like it. She has only been subjected to a fantasy world where everything is  seemingly perfect. This is illustrated in the story when Connie is thinking  about her previous encounters with boys: "Connie sat with her eyes closed in the  sun, dreaming and dazed with the warmth about her as if this were a kind of  love, the caresses of love, and her mind slipped over    onto thoughts of the boy  she had been with the night before and how nice he had been, how gentle, the way  it was in movies and promised in songs" (151).  					    
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