Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Rabbit, Run
Rabbit, Run Rabbit, Run was published in 1960 by American author John Updike. He wrote three more Rabbit novels, one at the end of the '60s, '70s, and '80s. He says these novels became ââ¬Å"a running report on the state of my hero and his nation. â⬠He won the Pulitzer Prize for the ââ¬Å"finalâ⬠two books. series continued after Rabbitââ¬â¢s death in Updikeââ¬â¢s 2001 novella, Rabbit Remembered. In 2006, The Rabbit series was voted number four on The New York Times list of ââ¬Å"the best work of American fiction of the past 25 years. Rabbit, Run was also selected by Time magazine as one of the top 100 books from 1923-2005. And the novel is also listed by the American Library Association as one of the 100 most frequently banned books in the 20th century. Banned? set in 1959, Rabbit, Run touches on some delicate issues, like prostitution, male and female orgasms, alcoholism, adultery, blow jobs, homosexuality (though only briefly and ambiguously), birth control, ab ortion, and even accidental. Its 26-year old protagonist Harry ââ¬Å"Rabbitâ⬠Angstrom even leers at 14-year old girls (though only to make his girlfriend jealous).Rabbit, Run also has lots of conversations between people arguing about different Christian philosophies, a main character with a bit of a Jesus Complex, a couple of atheists, and even a Freudian. Rabbit, Run was also what some consider a ââ¬Å"biting critiqueâ⬠of America in 1959 The American Dream meant being married with children, and having the latest in modern appliances and beauty products. Many of these issues are barely visible in the novel, but a working knowledge of America 1959 might help us understand the characters a little better. Themes Rabbit, Run Theme of FearFear pervades Rabbit, Run, though the novel does provide moments of relief. The main character, Harry ââ¬Å"Rabbitâ⬠Angstrom thinks heââ¬â¢s caught in a contracting and expanding ââ¬Å"trap,â⬠or ââ¬Å"web,â⬠or â⠬Å"net. â⬠He runs to counteract the fear this trap produces, though heââ¬â¢s usually running, literally, in circles. Fear drives Rabbit to run, and to be still ââ¬â to leave, but to always return. Heââ¬â¢s afraid the trap heââ¬â¢s stuck in is the trap of mediocrity; heââ¬â¢s sure something better awaits him. So he runs. Yet, he has obligations to others, and he fears that abandoning them makes him a bad man.So he goes back and forth. And back and forth, until his final run at the end of the novel. Rabbit, Run Theme of Religion Rabbit, Run is suffused with religious questioning. Much of the religious debate in the novel relates to variations of Christian philosophy, but Freudianism (treated something like a religion), atheism, and a brief appearance, or rather, disappearance of the Dalai Lama provide interesting contrasts. Some of these perspectives are pretty risky for the McCarthy-ist and Red Scare era 1959 that provides the backdrop for Rabbit, Run.The drowni ng death of a newborn baby challenges the religious beliefs of many of the characters, and even provokes her father to dream of founding a new religion, based on ââ¬Å"the truthâ⬠about life and death. The end of the novel does not tell us if he fulfills the dreamââ¬â¢s prophecy. Rabbit, Run Theme of Identity Rabbit, Run explores the ways in which individual needs and desires, responsibility, family, religion, pop culture, and The American Dream circa 1959 impact the identities of its characters.The tension between American pioneerism and American conformity results in an identity crisis for the novelââ¬â¢s main character, Harry ââ¬Å"Rabbitâ⬠Angstrom as he runs back and forth between them trying to escape an all pervasive ââ¬Å"trap. â⬠The results can be both stunningly beautiful and utterly shattering. The open ending leaves it to our imagination (unless we read the sequel, Rabbit, Redux) as to what extent the charactersââ¬â¢ identities are, or arenâ⠬â¢t, changed by the drowning death of Rabbitââ¬â¢s newborn daughter. Rabbit, Run Theme of Drugs and AlcoholJohn Updikeââ¬â¢s Rabbit, Run, published in 1960, is obsessed with alcohol and cigarettes. But unless you count delivery room anesthetics, drugs are only mentioned on the first page ââ¬â some basketball playing kids are smoking weed ââ¬â almost like Updike, writing about 1959, is predicting the ââ¬â¢60s and ââ¬â¢70s to come. Alcohol is mostly presented as a destructive force; whenever the characters get near it, disaster on small or large-scale results. Cigarettes too are presented as mostly destructive, contributing subtly and not so subtly to the smokersââ¬â¢ problems. Though at one moment a cigarette is seen as ââ¬Å"a wafer of repentance. So go steal the keys to the liquor cabinet and ââ¬â oh, you know Shmoopââ¬â¢s just kidding! Rabbit, Run Theme of Guilt and Blame Rabbit, Run is a guilt and blame-fest. This starts at the beginning of the n ovel when the main character, Harry ââ¬Å"Rabbitâ⬠Angstrom, runs away from his pregnant wife and his son. But when newborn Rebecca June Angstrom drowns in a bathtub, things get messy. Rabbitââ¬â¢s wife Janice admits she drowned the baby while drunk. Yet Rabbit is a prime suspect, especially to himself. He is a suspect precisely because he was not there when the baby died.All of the other characters in the novel are suspects too ââ¬â everybody simultaneously feels guilty and wants to blame others. Even the novelââ¬â¢s setting, America of 1959, is a suspect. Rabbit, Run Theme of Transience Rabbit, Runââ¬â¢s main character Harry ââ¬Å"Rabbitâ⬠Angstrom is in a perpetual state of transience. Heââ¬â¢s always on the move, usually on foot, though heââ¬â¢s occasionally found in a motor vehicle. He only stops to sleep and mate, and occasionally, to grab a bite to eat. Why does he run so hard? Because he thinks something better than what he has is waiting for h im.At the same time heââ¬â¢s afraid of deserting the people he cares about. He runs back and forth trying to find some kind of balance. Rabbit, Run challenges us to wonder if we are settling for mediocrity when sitting still, or risking everything when we make a move. Genre: Family drama: Families. Drama. Horror or Gothic Fiction: Mysterious traps. Priests. Hallucinations. Fear. Dead babies. Literary Fiction: Fancy prose style. Neurotic. Quest: Somebody looking for something. Realism: True to life. Mystery: Mysterious crimes. Innocent victims. Trying to find the truth. Tone: Degrading when talking about JaniceSympathetic Many characters in Rabbit, Run say, do, and think harsh things. But a tone of sympathy, and even love pervades. And man are these folks judgmental. Like when Rabbit calls Janice stupid, or when he calls himself a criminal. The tough talking narrator, though it seems to call for a complete overhaul of social norms, also seems to suggest that we are all just people , and people make mistakes. When we are able to identify with flawed or disliked characters, we can sometimes gain real introspection, as well as a deeper understanding of those around us. Rabbit, Run SummaryTwenty-six-year-old Harry ââ¬Å"Rabbitâ⬠Angstrom runs home one evening to find his wife, Janice, who is seven months pregnant, at home ââ¬â without their son Nelson and without the family car ââ¬â drinking, again. They argue, and he leaves to fetch the car and the boy, but along the way decides to permanently hightail it out of Mt. Judge, Pennsylvania and drive until he gets to the beach. He drives in circles and ends up back in Mt. Judge the next day. Instead of going home, he goes to see his high school basketball coach, Marty Tothero, who introduces him to Ruth Leonard, a sexually experienced woman about his age who has dabbled in prostitution.Rabbit and Ruth hit it off famously, and Rabbit decides to drop his car off for Janice, grab a few clothes, and shack u p with Ruth in the city of Brewer, of which Mt. Judge is a suburb. While leaving his old pad he is pursued by Jack Eccles, the minister of Janiceââ¬â¢s familyââ¬â¢s church. Eccles and Rabbit develop a friendship of sorts, which mostly consists of Eccles trying to convince Rabbit to return to Janice while battling (and coaching) him on the golf course ââ¬â and of Rabbit getting into some heavy flirting with Ecclesââ¬â¢ wife, Lucy. Two months pass. Rabbit and Ruth are for the most part happy.Rabbit has left his work as a MagiPeel Peeler salesman and found fulfillment in the widowed Mrs. Smithââ¬â¢s fabulous fifty-acre garden. Yet, signs of trouble are emerging in the Rabbit and Ruth household. Ruth is about a month pregnant, but hasnââ¬â¢t told Rabbit yet. Ruth and Rabbit go out for drinks one night and things get ugly. Rabbit feels that Ruth took the side of her old lover, Ronnie Harrison, when Ronnie was clearly giving Rabbit a hard time. Rabbit interrogates Ruth as to her sexual history with Ronnie, and then, upon finding out that she gave Ronnie a blowjob, requires Ruth to give him one to ake up for her traitorous behavior. She does, and a little later that night Reverend Eccles calls to tell Rabbit that Janice is in labor. He leaves Ruth to go to Janice and soon becomes the proud father of one Rebecca June Angstrom. While Janice is recovering, Rabbit moves back into their old apartment with his son Nelson, and cleans the place up while spending quality time with the boy. Janice gets out of the hospital, and things are OK. Janice isnââ¬â¢t drinking. Rabbit is working for her dad, selling used cars. But after nine days both Janiceââ¬â¢s body and mind are feeling postpartum strain.That Sunday, Rabbit goes to Ecclesââ¬â¢s church for the first time (leaving Janice and the kids at home to rest). He gets into some deep flirting with Lucy Eccles and comes home wanting to have sex NOW with Janice. The baby wonââ¬â¢t stop crying though, for like hours, and the whole time Rabbit is trying to get Janice to drink (to put her in the mood), chain smoking, and clinging to her in case she suddenly feels like having sex with him. Finally, the baby stops crying, Nelson goes to bed, and Rabbit gets Janice to take a drink.They get into bed and Rabbit tries to have sex with her. Still sore from giving birth, from her episiotomy, and from Rabbit living with ââ¬Å"a whore,â⬠Janice rebuffs him. He gets mad and leaves. Meanwhile, Janice really does start drinking, and drinks all day Monday in fact. Frantic and depressed, she slaps Nelson. Her mother calls and upsets her, and then she finds that Rebecca June has somehow gotten baby poop all over herself and her crib. Drunk and full of anger, confusion, and fear, Janice tries to give Rebecca a bath and accidentally drowns her.Rabbit calls Eccles that night and finds out what happened. Heââ¬â¢d spent the night in a motel and the day trying to catch a glimpse of Ruth, but w ith no luck. He busses back to Mt. Judge full of shame and remorse. Why is he so ashamed? Because he really thinks, most of the time, that he killed his daughter by not being in the apartment at the time of her death. He feels like he took out a hit on the kid when he walked out on Janice. He really convinces himself, and is disappointed that the law doesnââ¬â¢t consider him a suspect.This guilt makes him more determined than ever to work things out with Janice. To stay with her forever to atone for his sinsâ⬠¦butâ⬠¦ At the end of Rebecca Juneââ¬â¢s burial service he loudly accuses Janice of murdering their daughter and loudly proclaims his innocence. Humiliated, he runs. He runs to Brewer, finds Ruth, and guesses she is pregnant. She is really nasty to him and threatens to abort the baby if he doesnââ¬â¢t divorce Janice so he can marry her. He agrees, but when he steps out to pick up food from the deli, as youââ¬â¢ve probably predicted, he runsâ⬠¦And the boo k ends. 950ââ¬â¢s: experienced marked economic growth ââ¬â with an increase in manufacturing and home construction amongst a post-World War II economic boom. 1960ââ¬â¢s : In the United States, ââ¬Å"the Sixtiesâ⬠, as they are known in popular culture, is a term used by historians, journalists, and other objective academics and pejoratively to describe the era as one of irresponsible excess and flamboyance. The decade was also labeled the Swinging Sixties because of the fall or relaxation of some social taboos especially relating to sexism and racism that occurred during this time.The 1960s have become synonymous with the new, radical, and subversive events and trends of the period, which continued to develop in the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and beyond. In Africa the 1960s was a period of radical political change as 32 countries gained independence from their European colonial rulers 1963 ââ¬â Martin Luther King Jr. ââ¬Ës ââ¬Å"I Have a Dreamâ⬠speech in Washin gton, D. C. , on August 28. 1964 ââ¬â Civil Rights Act of 1964 signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson. This landmark piece of legislation in the United States outlawed racial segregation in schools, public places, and employment.
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