Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Title questions - WAYGWHYB

Where are you going, where have you been?

If the 33, 19, 17 number code is truly Judges 19:17, then the title makes some sense for sure.

In this article,
the author suggests that perhaps part of the title is that the father who "doesn't talk much" doesn't ask the normal father-of-a-teenage-girl questions that SHOULD be asked of little miss Connie like "Where are you going?" and "Where have you been?"

O'Connor's Influence

When Joyce Carol Oates was asked in a 1969 interview whether she was like Flannery O'Connor, she responded,

"I don't know. I used to think that I was influenced by O'Connor. I don't know that I am really. She is so religious, and her works have to be seen as religious works with this other rather creepy dimension in the background, whereas in my writing there is only the natural world."

Interesting, no? Oates said that before "Where are you going, where have you been" was published. The truth is, whether JCO likes it or not, there is so much of the non-"natural" world going on in "WAYGWHYB."

Of course, the most obvious part of that is Arnold Friend as Satan or Satanic or a Seductor in general.

MOREEEEEEEEEEE

Fairy Tales Gone Wrong

It is worth noting that both WAYGWHYB and AGMIHTF seem to be based on a "fairy tale gone wrong" kind of plot.

The family in "A Good Man is Hard to Find" is going on a cute little family vacay/road trip before disaster strikes.

And poor little Connie has her kind of "Red Riding Hood" plotline. She leads a somewhat charmed life until the seducer leads her away.

Just a thought.

Charles Schmid


Everyone, I would like to introduce you to Charles Schmid. The pied piper of Tucson.

Don't be fooled by the coy little eyebrow raise. He might kill you.


He was an inspiration for JCO's "Where are you going, Where have you been"

Read more here, ya'll.

Connie and the Grandmother

Vanity vanity vanity...

We can see a lot of similarities between the demeanor/narcissism of Connie and the Grandmother.

They are both so self-absorbed.

Is the Grandmother's death a Death and the Maiden tale as well?

Hmm...

Innocence and Experience

It's funny to read JCO's story again as a college student. My high school English teacher for my freshman and sophomore years went to Princeton, and so, being that JCO teaches at Princeton, I was immersed in the Oates.

At 15, I read "Where are you Going, Where Have you Been" and was struck by the oh-so-common "loss of innocence" motif. I remember actually going home after reading the story and writing my own version about a girl stuck in the moment in between innocence and experience. I named her Lavender. I had her floating around the house, in an out-of-body experience, unable to attach herself to the innocence of her childhood, and equally as unable to be in the realm of experience.

I saw Connie much that way, and I suppose so did Oates, because there is a lot of "she was in the kitchen but she didn't remember it looking like that" stuff in the text.

I'm always struck by the screen door.

It's only the screen door between her and death. Between innocence and experience. Just a flimsy, translucent/transparent screen door.

Now, all this innocence talk isn't to say that Connie is some angel, but she had only dabbled in the experiential world until Arnold Friend forced her to see the harsh reality of "adult" life.

It's mostly just sad for me to see that Connie has only the option of experience in the harshest way. There's no gray area at all. She's going to become experienced, whether she's willing or unwilling.

Sad.

33, 19, 17

Ah, the famous numbers.

33+19+17=69

Judges 19:17 is....
And he lifted up his eyes and saw the traveler in the open square of the city; and the old man said, "Where are you going, and where do you come from?"

Judges is the 33rd book counted from the back of the Bible to the front... hmm....

Coincidence? Or not? It seems farfetched, but it just fits SO well!

33,19,17 could be a woman's measurements.... but Connie would be a weird-looking woman with a 33 inch bust and only a 17 inch hip... awkward.