When I was 8 years old my family and I went to knotts berry farm. Being a small kid the time‚ I barely reached the height minimum to board. When I got on‚ I had to share a seat and lap bar with my dad and we didn’t put the seat belt on correctly. When the ride started‚ I could feel me slide around and my body lift off the seat. The whole ride I ended up hugging the lap bar‚ that wasn’t even pushing on my legs‚ in hopes that I would not fly off the seat. With this experience my mood transformed
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Joyce Carol Oates uses powerful imagery in the short story‚ such as the idea of love‚ dishonest smile‚ and Connie’s dissociative state. In the idea of love‚ she uses vivid language to explain Connie’s daydream. The actual desires where not yet tied to concrete the acts or a specific man. Connie’s is being attracted to the idea of love and sex confusing fantasy and reality. The author helps the reader to visualize on how girl’s discrete experiences fading into a deeper impulse. Connie being in the
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Jodelis Diaz Joyce Carol Oates is a very distinguished American writer but is known worldwide. She has produced novels‚ plays‚ short stories‚ and poetry. Oates is known for dark stories‚ brutality that her characters endure‚ and how she puts her personal life into these stories. Four sources that I have provided show how her stories connect with her life and why they are so dark. My first source‚ “The ‘I‚’ Which doesn’t Exist‚ is Everything” written by Jonne V. Creighton gives in depth information
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Literal Analysis of “Lovely‚ Dark‚ Deep” “Lovely‚ Dark‚ Deep” is one of the 13 short stories that were written by Joyce Carol Oates in one of her literal works known as Lovely‚ Dark‚ Deep: Stories‚ which was first published in Harpers in November 2013. “Lovely‚ Dark‚ Deep” primarily focuses on the life of a former poet by the name Robert Frost. It tells how Evangeline Fife‚ a young journalist‚ goes to interview Frost during the summer of 1951. As Fife arrives at Frost’s home‚ she finds him sleeping
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throwing the numbers 33‚ 19‚ and 17 and how Mark Robson misinterpreted them. He tells of how his biblical reference to Judges and Genesis is incorrect. His sole purpose in writing his essay is to explain how Robson screwed up. He uses quotes from Oates short story “Where are you going‚ Where have you been?” to support his thesis statement. Some of the points he makes are how the numbers 33‚ 19‚ and‚ 17 add up to be 69‚ which in French is ‘six- a – neuf’ and is used as a common sex symbol rather than
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the rest of the night‚ until one of my siblings came home. Transformation obviously creates fear because the settings can go from a nice‚ pleasant setting immediately to an alarming‚ gloomy‚ and frightening setting. This can be seen in the following three stories as well. Oates’s “Where is Here”‚ Arthur Tress’ “Dream Collector”‚ and Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven” use transformations to make their stories more suspenseful and frightening to the reader.
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Joyce Carol Oates’ story‚ “Where Are You Going‚ Where Have You Been?” is initially about a teen (Connie) who is going through the beginning phases of teen life‚ playing into the stereotype of an image-conscious teen. She is recalcitrant with her parents‚ sneaks off to start hanging out with boys‚ et cetera. About a third of the way through the story‚ a man that she had seen earlier at the diner shows up to take her out for a drive‚ and the situation goes downhill as she asks him more and more questions
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aren’t real‚ or for a parent to watch as their son or daughter make life changing decisions. Decisions like which colleges to go to‚ or to decide to marry their high school sweet heart. A teenager’s loss of innocence is the focal point of Joyce Carol Oates short story “Where are you going? Where have you been?” featuring the main protagonist‚ Connie. Connie is forced to face the ordeal of becoming an adult at the age of fifteen in a matter of minutes. She spurns her parents in an effort to be
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There are circumstances in one’s life that force us to advance our mentality. In Joyce Carol Oates’ "Where Are You Going‚ Where Have You Been." Connie‚ a young teen is faced with a life changing experience‚ forcing her to transform from a young teen to a young adult. In John Updike’s "A & P" Sammy chooses to put himself in a tight situation only to loose his job‚ trying to be heroic to three young girls and failed‚ as a result of his child-like decision. "Where Are You Going‚ Where Have
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In Joyce Carol Oates’ "Where Are you Going‚ Where Have You Been"‚ Oates used figurative language to show the evil in Arnold Friend and how he as a Fiend tries to pull Connie into his corrupted world. The harsh reality that Oates includes in her story is that there are fiends that may seem like a friend around us like Arnold. By using figurative language Oates can create a fiend from what Seem to be a Friend. There are many hints that Joyce left to show that Arnold Friend is not a friend at all
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