Sunday, August 4, 2019
Truth about Sammy in John Updikes A&P Essay -- A&P Essays
The Truth about Sammy in A & P         Ã  Ã   At first glance, Sammy, the  first-person narrator of John Updike's "A & P," would seem to present us  with a simple and plausible explanation as to why he quits his job at the  grocery store mentioned in the title: he is standing up for the girls that his  boss, Lengel, has insulted. He even tries to sell us on this explanation by  mentioning how the girls' embarrassment at the hands of the manager makes him  feel "scrunchy" inside and by referring to himself as their "unsuspected hero"  after he goes through with his "gesture." Upon closer examination, though, it  does not seem plausible that Sammy would have quit in defense of girls whom he  quite evidently despises, despite the lustful desires they invoke, and that more  likely explanations of his action lie in his boredom with his menial job and his  desire to rebel against his parents.      Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   While it's true that Sammy finds the three  scantily-clad girls who enter the supermarket attractive, as would any normal  nineteen-year-old male, what is most notable about his descriptions of the  girls, and particularly of the "leader" of the group, is that Sammy holds them  in contempt. Once we get beyond the descriptions of their bodies, we see nothing  but derogatory comments directed at them, including the derisive nicknames that  Sammy assigns to them. Nowhere is this more evident than in Sammy's description  of the leader, "Queenie." The nickname assigned to her by Sammy points out the  stereotypical snap judgment that Sammy makes about her personality and social  status initially, and to which Sammy rigidly adheres despite no real evidence of  its accuracy. From the description of her "prima donna" legs, to his imagining  of ...              ...gel's suggestion that he relent and keep his job, Sammy is  actually saying "no" to his parents and their attempt to put him on the road to  middle-class respectability.      Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In the final analysis, it would seem that the  most obvious explanation for why Sammy quits his job--the one that he  implies--is actually the least plausible. While Sammy would like to portray  himself as the fearless defender of the delicate sensibilities of innocent  girls, the reality is that Sammy's motives in quitting have far more to do with  his own sensibilities than with those of the three girls.     Work Cited     Ã       Ã       Updike, John. "A & P." The Bedford Introduction to Literature. 2nd  Edition. Ed. Michael Meyer. Boston: St. Martin's Press, 1990. 407-411.     Wells, Walter. "John Updike's 'A & P'" Studies in Short Fiction, vol. 30,  (1993) : Spring, pp. 127(7).     Ã                        
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