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The Chrysanthemums And Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?

Decent Essays

In the three short stories “The Chrysanthemums” by John Steinbeck, “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” by Joyce Carol Oates, and “Sonny’s Blues” by James Baldwin, each author provides insight into the complexity of human nature through the internal struggles faced by a main character within each story. In “The Chrysanthemums” Steinbeck paints Elisa in a way that displays her lack of feminine identity, highlighting her personal sexual views of herself and ¬¬the internal struggle it creates, then in “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”, Oates also presents a female who struggles with her sexual view of herself which we see throughout the story as Connie hides her sexuality at home but lets it run wild for the rest of the world, ultimately leading to her demise, and lastly in “Sonny’s Blues”, Baldwin introduces Sonny and the complex issues he goes through as his brother doubts his …show more content…

We see an example of this when we are shown how greatly in detail she cares for these flowers and the attachment she has to them which exceeds the levels of a typical person. Elisa is 35 without children and therefore we see these flowers have become her replacement for this feminine identity. Her sexual desire and feminine identity become so weakened that the slightest nice words from the Tinker excite her and cause her to feel more like a woman. Although at the start of the night out with her husband we see she is feeling good about herself and built up, we see that quickly collapse as she sees the chrysanthemums she gave to the Tinker ditched on the side of the road and she begins to cry and ends the story feeling “like a weak old woman (Steinbeck 244). By showing these extreme actions, Steinbeck shows how complex human emotions can be and how internal struggles can affect a person and change the way they see

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