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John Updike A & P Conflict

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John Updike’s “A&P” tells a story of young cashier’s encounter with three girls who enter the store in a manner that leads to the loss of his job. In the exposition, three girls with contrasting features make their way around the A&P and creates conflict because they are wearing nothing but bathing suits. One of the girls, who the narrator, Sammy, refers to as Queenie, has her bathing suit straps down “off her shoulders [and] looped loose around the cool tops of her arms (5).” In the rising action, their attire attracts attention from everyone in the store and, eventually, the manager address them and begins to lecture them on being “decently dressed (7)” and tells them to cover their shoulders upon their next visit. While the girls are “in a hurry to get out (7),” Sammy suddenly claims that he quits as he watches them “flicker …show more content…

Sammy’s way of putting people’s actions together and creating a whole personality with little to no interaction allows readers to see other characters in a different perspective. His thoughts and actions express that even though he mostly just observes others, he also has the ability to go against actions he disagrees with. The disappointment from his mom and the loss of the security of having a job managed by a family friend isn’t enough for him to stay quiet about the way Lengel treated Queenie. In contrast to a first person omniscient point of view, the story would have a completely different meaning if it was told in a third person complete omniscient point of view. If the readers were given the thoughts and feelings of the three girls, Lengel, the other workers, and bystanders, it would allow for clarifications as to why the girls chose to wear their bathing suits into the A&P and what others really thought of them, instead of just having the opinion of a 19 year old boy who didn’t like seeing a pretty girl be

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