In Joyce Carol Oates’s short story “Where is Here?” the stranger appears to be both excited and anxious about being inside his childhood home.
Oates shows that the stranger is in some type of distress through her descriptions of him. When he first enters the house, the text says that “his eyes darted about the kitchen almost like eyes out of control. He stood in an odd stiff posture, hands gripping the lapels of his suit as if he meant to crush them.” This suggests his body language is tense and uncomfortable, which indicates his mental or emotional stress.
Later, when the stranger enters the living room, he “[with] fastidious slowness . . . turned on his heel, blinking, and frowning, and tugging at his lower lip in a rough gesture that must have hurt.” This describes his exacting attention to detail while demonstrating his clear nervousness via awkward physical gestures.
The most poignant example of Oates's descriptions, however, comes when the stranger sits in the window seat. In a “slow, dazed voice,” the stranger mutters about the increasingly bizarre and existential riddles his mother used to ask him while they sat in the window seat together. The riddles themselves are odd enough, but his talking to himself aloud suggests he is in his own world, consumed with visions of his past—which might indicate that his purpose for visiting his childhood home is a complicated mix of both positive and negative factors.
As the story progresses, the reader realizes the stranger’s nervous emotional state because of Oates’s careful descriptions.
Friday, April 10, 2015
Which details in the description of the stranger create a sense of his agitation or distress?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Summarize the major research findings of "Toward an experimental ecology of human development."
Based on findings of prior research, the author, Bronfenbrenner proposes that methods for natural observation research have been applied in ...
-
The Awakening is told from a third-person omniscient point of view. It is tempting to say that it is limited omniscient because the narrator...
-
Roger is referred to as the "dark boy." He is a natural sadist who becomes the "official" torturer and executioner of Ja...
-
One way to support this thesis is to explain how these great men changed the world. Indeed, Alexander the Great (356–323 BC) was the quintes...
-
After the inciting incident, where Daniel meets his childhood acquaintance Joel in the mountains outside the village, the rising action begi...
-
The major difference that presented itself between American and British Romantic works was their treatment of the nation and its history. Th...
-
The Southern economy was heavily dependent upon slave labor. The Southern economy was agrarian; agriculture was its lifeblood, and being abl...
-
The first step in answering the question is to note that it conflates two different issues, sensation-seeking behavior and risk. One good ap...
No comments:
Post a Comment