Oates

’ “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”: Arnold Fiend Essay, Research Paper


Oates’ “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”: Arnold Fiend


In Joyce Carol Oates’ ?Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been??


critics argue whether the character of Arnold Friend, clearly the story’s


antagonist, represents Satan in the story. Indeed, Arnold Friend is an


allegorical devil figure for the main reason that he tempts Connie, the


protagonist, into riding off with him in his car.


Oates characterizes Arnold Friend at first glance as ?a boy with shaggy,


black hair, in a convertible jalopy painted gold?(581). She lets the reader


know that Arnold is not a teenager when Connie begins to notice the features


such as the painted eyelashes, his shaggy hair which looked like a wig, and his


stuffed boots; these features led her to believe he was not a teenager, but in


fact, much older. Oates does make Arnold out to be a psychopathic stalker, but


never objectively states the diabolical nature to his character.


In ?Connie’s Tambourine Man?, a critical essay on the story, the authors


write about Arnold Friend: ?There are indeed diabolical shades to Arnold just as


Blake and Shelley could see Milton’s Satan a positive, attractive symbol of the


poet, the religious embodiment of creative energy, so we should also be


sensitive to Arnold’s multifaceted and creative nature?(Tierce and Crafton 608).


Mike Tierce and John Michael Crafton suggest that Arnold Friend is not a


diabolical figure, but instead a religious and cultural savior.


On a more realistic note, Joyce M. Wegs argues the symbolism of Arnold


Friend as a Satan figure when she writes: ?Arnold is far more a grotesque


portrait of a psychopathic ki

ller masquerading as a teenager; he also has all


the traditional, sinister traits of that arch deceiver and source of grotesque


terror, the devil?(616). She also writes about how the author sets up the idea


of a religious, diabolical figure when she links popular music and its values as


Connie’s perverted version of a religion. Another hint is Arnold’s almost


supernatural, mysterious knowledge about Connie, her family and her friends(Wegs


617).


The main reason why the reader would extract this diabolical symbol from


reading the story is that Arnold’s character bears striking resemblance to


Satan’s. At the drive-in, Arnold is warning Connie of his coming when he wags


his finger at her and says ?Gonna get you, baby?(Oates 581). The majority of


the story is Arnold tempting Connie to leave the safe haven that is her home and


go for a ride with him in his car. The diabolical symbolism is most visible in


the following quote: ?I ain’t made plans for coming in that house where I don’t


belong, but just for you to come out to me, the way you should. Don’t you know


who I am??(Oates 589).


Having all the diabolical characteristics of Satan, and with his


relentless temptation of Connie, Arnold Friend most certainly represents a devil


figure in this short story.


Works Cited


Kiszner, Laurie G., and Stephen R. Mandell, eds. Literature: Reading, Reacting,


Writing. Fort Worth: Harcourt, 1997.


Oates, Joyce Carol “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”…Kirszner and


Mandell, 579-591.


Wegs, Joyce M. “Don’t You Know Who I Am?”……Kirszner and Mandell 614-619.


Tierce, Michael and John Michael Crafton. “Connie’s Tambourine


Man”…..Kirszner and Mandell, 607-612.

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