Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12323/4933
Title: Heroism in the Age of Consumerism: The Emergence of a Moral Don Quixote in John Updike’s “A & P”
Authors: Bezdoode, Zakarya
Bezdoode, Eshaq
Keywords: John Updike
Max Weber
intellectual decision
morality
“A & P”
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: Khazar University Press
Citation: Khazar Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences
Series/Report no.: Vol. 23;№ 3
Abstract: This paper analyzes John Updike’s short story “A & P” in the light of Max Weber’s notion of moral decision-making. A prominent contemporary American story-writer and literary critic, Updike has devoted his fiction to subjects' rational and moral problems in the contemporary consumerist society. Updike’s lifelong probing into the middle classes' lives is a body of fiction that raises questions about determinism, moral decision, and social responsibility, among others. “A & P” is a revealing example of such fiction and one among Updike’s most frequently anthologized short stories. The story, titled after a nationwide American shopping mall in the early twentieth century, investigates the possibility of decision-making within consumerist society. This paper demonstrates how Updike’s portrayal of his characters' everyday lives reveals the predicament of intellectual thinking and moral decision-making in a consumerist society and warns against the loss of individual will in such societies.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12323/4933
ISSN: 2223-2621
Appears in Collections:2020, Vol. 23, № 3



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