Friend Or Foe? Essay, Research Paper
?Friend or Foe??
?Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?, is one of the many short stories written by Mrs. Joyce Carol Oates that has become highly recognized. It was inspired by a magazine story about a serial killer. It quickly it became very popular andwas even the basis for the 1985 hit movie, ?SmoothTalk?. Like many other short stories and novels written by Joyce Carol Oates, ?Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? is a story that is consumed by evil, the theme. In the story evil is projected through the eyes of the characters.(Weinberger 207) Joyce Carol Oates has been labeled by many as a, ?writer of psychological realism?(Wegs 69), which is seen in this story. Tied in with the theme are three particular literary elements that interlink all of the scattered details, leaving the readers in awe at the end of the narrative. The three literary elements contributing to the short story are irony, imagery and symbolism. Irony is an important element in ?Where Are You Going, Where HaveYou Been.? The title itself is ironic since it is two questions that Connie is never asked. No one has ever asked, where she was going, nor has anyone ever inquired where she has been.(sullivan 535) What is also ironic is that although she is the victim in this tale, she actually welcomes and invites this demonic provocation.(Hurly 64) Her fears that have always overtaken he subconscious self drive her into distorted separation of mind and body in which sher ealizes that her unconscious self has betrayed her.(Wegs 70) Something else somewhat ironic is when Arnold Friend says,? I?ll hold you so tight you won?t think you have to try to getaway or pretend anything because you?ll know youcan?t.?Oats 460), he is also referring in a sense that his hold is the same as the hold that nature has over life.(Wegs 71) In this particular short fiction, the comfortable details of Connie?s life ironically become frightening later as she discovers that her lover also wears a face of ?lust, evil, and death.?(Hurly 64) At this point as she is standing in her doorway the flimsy screen door that did serve as a teasing barrier, coincidentally becomes a means of protection from Arnold Friend.(Gillis 66)
Imagery in the short story also plays a significant role behind the characters and their words true meaning. The author implies corrupted religious imagery suggesting that modern gods have somewhat replaced traditional religion. “She emphasizes illusions of false values which arise from obsession with modern culture like media, music and movies.?(Dessommes 435) Oates delineates the moral poverty of Connie, her fifteen-year-old protagonist, by imaging a typicalevening Connie spends at a drive-in restaurant as a grotesquely parodied religious pilgrimage.?(Wegs 74) Mrs.Oates paints the perfect picture in the minds of her readers who are not the least bit suspicious about what will soon happen. Quoted from the book,? Variation on an American Hymn?, in ?Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been,? ? Arnold Friend is created out of the stock images of rock-and-roll songs, but his idealized imageis violated by limitations imposed by real life, that dreams do not come true and that anyone purporting to be teenage idol should be checked for a receding hairline.? This short story is filled with the imagery of life?s deceptions and perils.
The symbolism behind the tale, in my opinion, accounts for most of the evil within it. Most symbolic is the character, Arnold Friend. He has all of the qualities that a young lover would. He speaks the slang, he has the right clothes andhe drives the right car. Everything seems right at first glance, but after a few minutes those qualities fall apart one by one, willingly revealing his true self.(Robson 99) She notices his shaggy black hair that is, ?as crazy as a wig,? really is a wig. Then she notices that a thick coat of makeup has created the mask-like appearance of his face: however his throat, free of makeup, is still bare. Even his eyelashes seem to have been made up!(Weinberger 210) Although Connie approved of his clothing, she noticed something quite disturbing about Arnold Friend. As he walked she noticed that his
As I mentioned before, irony, imagery, and symbolism all come together in “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been,” to create and maintain the image of evil. Whether or not one portrays Arnold Friend as the devil or just a psychopathic killer, the short story is still a shocking, tragic tale of what happens when reality takes a pitfall into sin and immortality, producing an irrepressible fate.(Hurly 375)
Bibliography
References:
primary source ” Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been” Joyce Carol Oates
secondary source packet ” The Pied Piper”
Nancy Bishop Dessommes
O’Connor’s Mrs. May and Oates’s Connie: An Unlikely Pair of Religious Initiates.
Studies in Short Fiction
Summer 1994, v31 n3 p433-40
D. F. Hurley
Impure Realism: Joyce Carol Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”
Studies in Short Fiction
Summer 1991, v28 n3 p371-75
G. J. Weinberger
Who is Arnold Friend? The Other Self in Joyce Carol Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”
American Imago
Summer 1988, v45 n2 p205-15
C. Harold Hurley
Cracking the Secret Code in Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”
Studies in Short Fiction
Winter 1987, v24 n1 p62-6
Mark B. Robson
Joyce Carol Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” Arnold Friend as Devil, Dylan, and Levite
Publications of the Mississippi Philological Association
1985, p98-105
Mark Robson
Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”
Explicator
Summer 1982, v40 n4 p59-60
Christina Marsden Gillis
“Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”: Seduction, Space, and a Fictional Mode
Studies in Short Fiction
Winter 1981, v18 n1 p65-70
Kevin J. Harty
Archetype and Popular Lyric in Joyce Carol Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”
Pennsylvania English
1980-81, v8 n1 p26-28
Joyce M. Wegs
“Don’t You Know Who I Am?”: The Grotesque in Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”
Journal of Narrative Technique
January1975, v5 n1, p66-72
Walter Sullivan
Where Have All the Flowers Gone?: The Short Story in Search of Itself
Sewanee Review
Summer 1970, v78 n3 p535-537
online sources
Encarta.com
Cornell university online