Thursday, June 4, 2020
Shopping for Principles at the AP - Literature Essay Samples
It is of little coincidence that John Updikeââ¬â¢s AP occurs in one of Americaââ¬â¢s most well-known supermarket chains where, ââ¬Å"sheep pushing their carts down the aisleâ⬠search for the best bargains, and customers give ââ¬Å"hellâ⬠over a few pennies (Updike 187). Perhaps AP illustrates the way in which capitalist societies push us to our limits, turning us into nothing more than factory workers. Such is the case for Sammy, who day by day goes ââ¬Å"through the punchesâ⬠of tedious cash register work, while the unappreciative bourgeoisie fail to realize his job is ââ¬Å"more complicated than you think;â⬠the strains of this slave-like life turn Sammy into a type of machine, who sadly hears songs in the beeps and chirps of his cash register (Updike 194). While some may believe Sammyââ¬â¢s heroic gesture of quitting is: ââ¬Å"meaningless and . . . arises from selfish rather than unselfish impulses,â⬠I believe his action was more of an awake ning to the American class system, where people such as Queenie ââ¬â who live up to our prima-donna images of women, are still ostracized by the establishment symbolized in Lengel (Uphaus qtd. in McFarland 97). While it is true that Sammy actsà childishly, it is importantà to remember that this story is toldà from the perspectiveà of a nineteen-year-old, whose outlook on life is still being formed. What I am suggesting is that Sammy quitting his job is partly representative of his teenage immaturity, but it is also partly the beginning of a revolution in his mind. Aà Marxist reading of AP considers the story to be aà refutation of mid-century Americanà capitalist values. AP beautifully illustrates the way in which capitalism commodifies objects in our society. In a capitalist society beauty in itself is not enough to make a person successful. If Queenie had visibly come from a lower-class family, Sammy likely would not have shown interest in her. Capitalism has brainwashed Sammyââ¬â¢s mind, like theà brainwashing of Jay Gatsby, in a way that forces him to pursue the ââ¬Ëhigher things;ââ¬â¢ he never takes into account that Queenie could be an awful girl, with a horrible attitude, becauseà he can only see the signs of wealth, which inherently make her beautiful in his capitalist attitude toward the world. In the same way that Sammy finds beauty in Queenie, we also see the other girls imitating her for the same reasons. For instance, Queenie is often portrayed as the leader of the group; she ââ¬Å"walks, heavy-heeled and head high, with the haughty pride of the affluent, secularized American upper middle classâ⬠(Wells 129). Updike exemplifiesà our tendency to find beauty in things that are associated with upper class wealth in his portrayal of not only Queenie, but her companions as well. Both the ââ¬Å"chunky kid, with a good tanâ⬠and the girl who ââ¬Å"other girls think is very ââ¬Ëstrikingââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëattractiveââ¬â¢ but never quite makes itâ⬠are designed in a way that makes them subservient to Queenie (Updike 188). Throughout the story we find these two girls following Queenie in strange aspiration, hoping to be like her; Queenie is ââ¬Å" . . . the Queen. She kind of led them [the other girls] . . . showing them how to do it; and she is portray ed as wise, knowing exactly what she needs from this life, careful not to ââ¬Å"look around . . . she just walked straight on slowly [through the isles] . . . [keeping] her eyes moving across the racksâ⬠(Updike 188-89). Queenie fits mold of a model consumer, scanning the shelves of AP seeking out aà bargain; meanwhile the ââ¬Å"fat one . . . fumbled with the cookies, but on second thought she put the package down,â⬠suggesting that the chunky girl is ââ¬Å"fatâ⬠because she is a careless consumer, lacking the keen buying sense that makes Queenie physically attractive in the eyes of a capitalist society (Updike 190). The reader may begin to draw a subconscious parallel between two negative attributes ââ¬â obesityà and irrational consumption. Combined with the commodification of Queenie, whose body symbolizes what makes every female pop superstar or model a monetary success, the reader takes the ââ¬Ëchunkyââ¬â¢ girlââ¬â¢s weight problem, along with her buying habits and creates an image of Queenie that is highly superior to that of the ââ¬Ëchunkyââ¬â¢ girl. The irony of this commodification is that the ââ¬Ëchunkyââ¬â¢ girl probably comes from the same class as Queenie, but since obesity is not associated with success, the reader automatically places her into a class lower than that of Queenie. America is exposed as a society that value success, and financialà success in particular, above all else. Perhaps it is these contradictions in how we perceive class that frustratesà Sammy so much, causing him to quit his job. In the same way Queenie and the ââ¬Ëchunkyââ¬â¢ girl are from the same class, Lengel and Queenie also share a similar class ââ¬â a class where men are: ââ¬Å"standing around in ice-cream coats and bow ties,â⬠and the women are ââ¬Å"in sandals picking up herring snacks on toothpicksâ⬠(Updike 193). Lengel persecutes Queenie not because of her skimpy clothing, but because of a more pressingà reason ââ¬â she is disturbing his customers and in effect causing him to lose money. Sammy begins to see the hypocrisy in Lengel, who portrays himself as the highly moral Sunday school teacher, but comes off more as a pitiful dictator ââ¬â not concerned withà morality at all, onlyà money.à Queenie is the symbol of what being ââ¬Ëhipââ¬â¢ is. She is on the cutting edge of fasionà and pushing socialà limits while showing off her beauty. Since Lengel comes from a higher class, running a seemingly bourgeois business, his sole purpose is to serve his conservative working-class customers, even though he may believe that the girls skimpy clothing is perfectly acceptable. Similar to how some claim Sammy isà merely trying to impress the girls by quitting, Lengel is attempting to impress his working-class customers by reprimanding the girls, so there is a contradiction between Lengelââ¬â¢s class and how he must act: the ââ¬Å"supposedly elite upper class, is in fact, very casual, too casual, under the circumstancesâ⬠for Lengel, and for a moment, he must lower himself to the class of his customers (McFarland 99). The setting of this story is possibly one of the best Updike could have chose to spread the anti-capitalist message of A a supermarket is ââ¬Å"the common denominator of middle-class suburbia, an appropriate symbol for the mass ethic of a consumer-conditioned society,â⬠where ââ¬Å"crackers and herring snacks meet, and so do the proletarian . . . the bourgeois, and the patrician (Porter 1155, McFarland 99). For example, when the reader is first introduced to the girls it is somewhat tied into the imagery of the store: before even learning where the story takes place we are introduced to ââ¬Å"three girls in nothing but bathing suits,â⬠immediately making the reader focus on the commodification of the girls before the actual setting (Updike 187). Also, when we, as people who live within a capitalist society, think of women who dress in such attire, we do not think of their mental capacity, but we view them asà sexual commodities, commodities that oftentimes are used to sell products in American advertising. We tend to view women who dress in this manner as ââ¬Å"sluttyâ⬠or ââ¬Å"loose;â⬠for the girls to enter into a supermarket it emphasizes the true American feeling towards women: they are not viewed as human beings at all, but viewed as products that can be browsed through like clothing on a rack. This commodification is yet another flaw in capitalist societies that cause us to put lessà value on the worth ofà individual human beingsà and to only see peopleà as producers and consumers.à Queenie is no longer a woman; she is just anotherà product in the store, something that with the right amount of money, can be bought. Sammy likens fluorescent lights shining on the girls in the store to that of sun glaring on their bodies at the beach. In the same way that the florescent lights help people compare stacked products to buy at the store, their brightnessà exposes the apperances of the girls in an especially exposing arti ficial, here artificial, light that may dehumanize them.à Sammy possesses a great eye for quality, not only in women but in products: ââ¬Å"[Sammy] speaks disdainfully . . . of such products in the store as ââ¬Ërecords at discount of the Caribbean Six or Tony Martin Sings or some such gunk you wonder they waste the wax on . . . and plastic toys done up in cellophane that fall apart when a kid looks at them anywayâ⬠(Updike qtd. in Porter 1155-6). Associations between people and products is common practice, and Sammy possesses a tendency to associate himself with HiHo crackers (a middle class product), rather than more expensive Ritz crackers (possibly viewed as a snack of the high class). Queenie, presumably upper class, is associated with ââ¬Å"Kingfish Fancy Herring Snacks,â⬠a brand name that ââ¬Å"not only fits the imperial Queenie, but also suggests the social class . . . to which she belongsâ⬠(McFarland 97). What weà may want to ask ourselves is: What does Sammy see in Queenie? Is Sammy truly thinking for himself or is he just like the ââ¬Å"witch about fifty with rouge on her cheekbones,â⬠or the people who ââ¬Å"would by and large keep reaching and checking oatmeal off their listsâ⬠even if a bomb exploded in the store? (Updike 187, 190) At one point in the story, Sammy doesà indeed fallà into the trap of capitalist ideology, not thinking logically, and the setting of the store only drawsà him deeper into error. However, when Sammy says: ââ¬Å"Poor kids, I began to feel sorry for them [the girls]â⬠we begin to see the change in Sammyââ¬â¢s understanding. Queenie becomes more than a beautiful girl that Sammy fanaticizes about, andà he begins to see her as a victim [of an invasive brand of capitalism] (Updike 191). She becomes a victim of capitalism because of the way that Lengel abuses her and also in the way that she is commodified by the other customers in the storeà . Not only does Queenie become a victim, but Sammy begins to see himself as a victim when he symbolically ââ¬Å"punches the ââ¬ËNo Sale tabââ¬â¢ and walks outside where, ââ¬Ëthe sunshine is skating around on the asphaltâ⬠(Updike qtd. in Porter 1157). Even at the beginning of the story we see that Sammy is vaguely familiar with the flaws of capitalism and often sees the store as an artificial atmosphere, viewing the ââ¬Å"fluorescent lightsâ⬠and ââ¬Å"green-and-cream rubber tile floorâ⬠as generic. He ridicules customers such as the ââ¬Å"witch about fifty,â⬠describing them as cattle who merely roam the isles looking for a good bargain (Porter 1156, Updike 187). The sunshine that falls on Sammy upon his exit is a deep contrast to the artificial fluorescent lights he worksà under in the AP. à The sunlight, a representation of sincerity, perhaps illuminatesà the truth of things, shedding a humanist natural light on people. The flawed capitalist ideology, by whichà people are viewed by how much money they make, is put aside, and Sammy begins to realize ââ¬Å"how hard the world was going to be on [him] hereafter;â⬠upon leaving his job Sammy feels relief, even though he realizes the decision he has ma de is a difficult one (Updike 196). In contrast to the pathetic musical tones Sammy hearsà from his cash register earlier, the story endsà with a loud ââ¬Å"pee-pul . . . [as the] drawer splats out,â⬠symbolizing Sammy breaking free from capitalist ideology (Updike 196). Perhaps it is not even obvious to Sammy himself why he has acted in the way that he does. In fact, maybe it is thisà uncertainty in Sammyââ¬â¢s future that adds so much intrigue to the story, as if now Sammy has the potential to create his own, enlightened, genuine future. Walter Wells describes the ending as a look ââ¬Å"aheadââ¬âinto the life that lies before [Sammy] . . . And he sees nothing very clearly, only indefinitenessâ⬠(132). AP is the typical tale of a teenager who begins to awaken to the faults of the world around him, and like many people who begin to understand life for the first time. Sammyââ¬â¢s quitting may seem childish or stupid, but it isà actually the first step in a rebellion against the crooked ideals around him. If it is true that Sammy doesà not realize what he isà rebelling against, it emphasizes that capitalism is an unnatural way of life, and it would be natural that human beings lash out against it, even ifà they do not realize whyà exactly they are doing it. Sammy symbolizes the frustration of a person who simply cannot understand the monetized, hyper-capitalist world around him and therefore, chooses to no longer participate, at least not in the same way, at least not at the same store.à Works Cited McFarland, Ronald E. ââ¬Å"Updike and the Critics: Reflections on A P.â⬠Studies-in-Short-Fiction 20.2-3 (1983) : 95-100. Porter, M. Gilbert. ââ¬Å"John Updikes A P: The Establishment and an Emersonian Cashier.â⬠The English-Journal 61 (1972) : 1155-58. Wells, Walter. ââ¬Å"John Updikes A P: A Return Visit to Araby.â⬠Studies-in-Short-Fiction 30.2 (1993) : 127-33. Updike, John. ââ¬Å"AP.â⬠Pigeon Feathers, and Other Stories. New York: Knopf, 1962.
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