Thursday, November 7, 2019
The Compact Bedford Introduction to Literature Essays
The Compact Bedford Introduction to Literature Essays The Compact Bedford Introduction to Literature Paper The Compact Bedford Introduction to Literature Paper AP, John Updikeââ¬â¢s story of a ââ¬Å"courageousâ⬠grocery clerk, is one of Updikeââ¬â¢s most popular stories perhaps because it is, at first glance a simple read, but further readings show how the author is able to create a dynamic story that involves figuring out what certain parts of the story may mean. For example, focusing on the ending, when Sammy punches the ââ¬Å"No Saleâ⬠tab as he remembers how Lengel ââ¬Å"made the pretty girl blushâ⬠(Updike 564), we can see how this ââ¬Å"No Saleâ⬠extends itself not just to its uses on the cash register, but also within the story; it acts as a literary symbol within the text. First, we find how there is ââ¬Å"no saleâ⬠between the store manager, Lengel, and the girls. They, might, perhaps belong to a different class, a class ââ¬Å"from which the crowd that runs the A P must look pretty crummyâ⬠(Updike 563), but Lengel does not let that get in the way of his reminding the girls of propriety and decency. Lengel does not indulge in the idea that, because the girls are attractive and might be better-off, he should let them off easy or that he should just let them be. Besides this, the girlsââ¬â¢ obliviousness to Sammyââ¬â¢s affected act of ââ¬Å"gallantryâ⬠is also telling of how there is ââ¬Å"no saleâ⬠between him and them. The girls are too preoccupied with getting out of the store and are also rather indifferent to their surroundings and, thus, cannot appreciate nor acknowledge would-be heroics for their benefit. Then, we have a ââ¬Å"no saleâ⬠between Sammy and his act of quitting itself. After realizing that the girls are nowhere to be found and have missed his heroics, he acknowledges Lengelââ¬â¢s remark of him not really wanting to push through with quitting as true. He realizes that he will regret this act sometime in the future, but continues to push through with it just because of momentum (and probably to save face). Finally, the ââ¬Å"no saleâ⬠agenda is something that has been going on between the reader and Sammy himself. The reader, because he or she is privy to Sammyââ¬â¢s initial thoughts about the girls, knows that his act of quitting is something that is actually quite pretentious and somewhat insincere. Perhaps, he did feel a little indignant at Lengel for gently reprimanding his Queenie and her friends, but all-in-all his act was done in order to call the girlsââ¬â¢ attention onto his self and not really to uphold their rights or their dignity, and because the reader knows this, that ââ¬Å"no saleâ⬠feeling is created. : Updike, John. ââ¬Å"APâ⬠. The Compact Bedford Introduction to Literature Eighth Edition. Ed. Michael Meyer. Boston and New York: Bedford/St. Martin, 2009. 560-564.
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