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Analysis Of The Swimmer By John Cheever

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The Swimmer by John Cheever tells the story of a man journeying to retain his youth but in the end, loses more than he realises. Ironically enough, this is similar to what the protagonist in Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been, (written by Joyce Carol Oates) experiences. Both characters have an established goal yet never quite reach it. Imagery and symbolism are used to adeptly express this throughout each piece which creates an unsettling mood following the resolution. Imagery to infer the inevitable passing of time begins to appear in the form of rapidly changing seasons. At the beginning of the story, Cheever establishes that it is summer: ““It was one of those midsummer Sundays when everyone sits around saying, “I drank too …show more content…

It is in the small act of disrespect that represents what Neddy has been refusing to accept all along - people disliking him for some undiscovered reason that has potentially left him as a shell of his former self. Notions of sympathy are also strong hints regarding Neddy’s blissful and unaware state. In the middle of the story, friends comment on feeling terribly sorry for his misfortunes (which he is oblivious to) and “poor children” (31). In response to this, he affirms that he had not sold his house and his daughters are at home. Mrs. Halloran’s voice is then described as having an “unseasonable melancholy” (31) which would not be in the sense of total agreement with this declaration. His willing oblivion is finally unhindered when Neddy returns to his house, seeing that it had been long forgotten by the “rusted garage door handles” (34) and the emptiness within, which might also relate to the emptiness inside himself as well. The story ends with this cruel realisation, giving very little closure. This contributes to the unsettling and shocking mood that said conclusion portrays. The imagery in Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? is fairly pivotal in relation to the climax and resolution, but it is portrayed in a way that centres around physicality as opposed to the metaphorical mind. Connie seeks individualism as much as she is confident and is willing to challenge parental

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