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Heroism In A & P By John Updike

Decent Essays

Life is about being true to yourself and following how you truly feel even if there are consequences to follow. In “A&P,” author John Updike develops a theme of the eventual consequences of actions. The story depicts a transition story of adolescence to adulthood where the narrator Sammy makes a hasty decision that he believes is a step toward adulthood. Unfortunately for Sammy, his hasty act of perceived heroism is not even recognized by the three girls it was intended for and he has to deal with the results of quitting his job in their honor. Through the central character’s experience of growing up with a combination of decision-making, wanting to be accepted, and responsibility, Updike conveys the message that actions can have long-term consequences and that one is responsible for one’s own actions. …show more content…

The setting of the story is a simple place where the American Dream is having a safe place to live and a decent job. Updike suggests that when a society is accustomed to only one way of doing things, anything out of the ordinary is hard to accept. The town is made up of an older generation who resists allowing new things in their world due to the fear of change. This fear causes people not to take risks and to stay in their comfort zone where they are not always happy. James F. Bugental, author of “A Fate Worse than Death: The Fear of Changing,” believes humans fear change because it seems that change threatens the very structures which people feel are their lives (543). Sammy is clearly trapped in boredom with this dead end job and is afraid to dream big for his future. Not all people are lucky enough to make a change on their own. Sometimes it takes help from the outside to make a

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