Examples Of Psychological Horror In Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?

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Psychological horror is characterized as horror literature which “relies on the character fears, guilt, failings, evil, and mental instability to build tension or further the plot (Howells 410).” Many stories can be defined as psychological horror, including the short story, “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” by Joyce Carol Oates. “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” revolves around the story of Connie, a fifteen year old, who through her own mistakes, allows herself to be stolen from her home by a stranger, Arnold Friend, who gained an obsession with Connie. This short story is an example of psychological horror portrayed through the themes such as independence, fantasy versus reality, and loss of innocence. Connie is constantly …show more content…

Before the story takes its horrifying turn, Connie is simply sunbathing. It is never told if the story takes place in Connie’s fantasy or reality, contributing to the silent horror of “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been.” When Connie is sunbathing, she is completely relaxed. However, “…when she opened her eyes she hardly knew where she was…She shook her head as if to get awake (Oates 417).” The entire short story can be a delusion of Connie’s sun soaked imagination, or it is the harrowing tale of how Connie’s false maturity caught up with her. For that reason, Oates’ famous short story is a psychological horror. The short story is not meant to terrify. The story unsettles, and burrows into one’s skin, the metaphorical definition of psychological horror. Later on, Arnold is attempting to coax Connie from her home. Frequently, Arnold is often symbolized as a devil and in the story he is characterized as human, but also as less than human. Connie claims her father will be home any minute, but Arnold knows when her father will actually be home. In fact, Arnold says “I know your name and all about you, lots of things (Oates 419)." The devil is, like God, considered all-knowing. He knows all sins, all thoughts, and everything about people’s lives. Similarly, Arnold Friend knows everything about Connie. He knows her dates, her …show more content…

Arnold Friend rips out Connie’s innocence, using the vagueness that allows the imagination to scare itself. During her encounter with Arnold, Connie is told never to touch the phone. The narrator tells of Connie’s desperate struggle for the phone, and her failure, as “She cried out, she cried for her mother, she felt her breath start jerking back and forth in her lungs as if it were something Arnold Friend was stabbing her with again and again with no tenderness (Oates 424).” It is not known whether Arnold is actually stabbing Connie, hitting her, or raping her. The reader uses the imagination to create terror, choosing what type of fear to experience. In this way, the story evokes a mental fear. Furthermore, Connie’s realization she can no longer fight back or escape is the most tangible part of the story’s dread. Near the end of the short story Connie allows Arnold to take her from her home. During this, “[s]he thought, I 'm not going to see my mother again. She thought, I 'm not going to sleep in my bed again (Oates 425).” Connie realizes she is not the adult she thought she was. In the end, all she wants is her family to protect her, but she knows she will probably never see them again. Her innocence to the world is taken from her, and what the world has left to offer her is more haunting than any ghost or demon can

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