Casual Rebellion In John Updike's A & P

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In John Updike’s short story, A&P, the protagonist investigates the theme of assigning significance to others’ actions. As the three bathing suit-clad girls shop, Sammy reads into their existence in the store as the utmost portrayal of confidence and casual rebellion. However, the girls are there to complete a task asked of them, and don’t intend on causing such the stir that leads Sammy to quit his job. Sammy unknowingly explores the discontinuity between the importance of one’s own actions and another’s. As a teenaged boy working at a run-of-the-mill grocery store, Sammy believes to have those around him figured out. After accidentally ringing up a customer’s item twice, Sammy concludes that she would’ve been a witch during the Salem witch trials and that “it made her day to trip [him] up” (Updike 14). Being a cash register gave Sammy the advantage of people-watching; in people-watching, he believed to not only be better than those around him, but be able to read into their actions. In describing the shoppers as sheep, Sammy placed …show more content…

Sammy is generous in his descriptions of their bodies, and assigns value to their presence in his store. They are a representation of rebellion, of the casual disregard for social norms that Sammy is not familiar with. However, the girls did not walk into the grocery store with bathing suits and bare feet to show Sammy there is more to life than the green and white tile of the A&P, they are there to accomplish a task. Possibly, the girls could have been aware of how their attire might be received, but they “just came in for the one thing” (Updike 17). A task so unimportant to them that they did not bother to throw on shirts or shorts, because they knew they would be in and out of the store in less time than grabbing clothes would take. The girls didn’t exist to become Sammy’s revelation; they existed in the moment to buy herring snacks and resume their

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