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Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?

1. The plot of the fiction Where ar You Going, Where Have You Been?  create verbally by Joyce Carol Oates is virtually Connie, fifteen year-old girl, who was possessed with the way she looks. Her stick was not happy about Connies possession, and always set her old(a) sister June as an typesetters case of a good girl, imperativeness that Connie should be like June You dont see your sister using that junk  (Oates 233). It was Sunday when Arnold title-holder came to Connies mansion house while her family was on a barbecue. He came with his creepy friend, Ellie, and was playacting like he knew her rattling salutary, and insists her to go with them for a sit down we aint leaving until you come with us  (Oates 239).\n\n2. Where are you going, where have you been starts with Her induce was Connie  (Oates 233) which signals that the story is going to be told in third-person narrator. Most of the story told from Connies point of view. Narrator who baffle thing as Co nnie sees allows lector to identify that during her conversation with Arnold Friend, she is change from flirt ...Youre my date. Im your lover, honey,  (Oates 240) to victim soon as you touch the predict I...can come inside. You wont want that  (Oates 241). Arnold Friend is presented the way he appears to Connie which makes him slight human and more ominous. using a third-person narrative voice, kind of of using Connies words, gives Oats to use descriptive language that Connie possible would not be able to use. Because of narratives language, mass of mood, imaginary and symbolist presented in the story. \n\n3. The literal use of symbol drear  in a story is basically a main twine of Arnold Friend. His vibrissa ...he had shaggy, shabby black haircloth that looked crazy...  (Oates 236) and lashes are black; also, his jeans are black as well as a color of his name on a car ARNOLD FRIEND was written in tarlike black earn on a side... (Oates 236). Everything that c aught Connies guardianship in Arnold represent black ...

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