"Conversation with a Cupboard Man" - Ian McEwan

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Overview of Ian McEwan's short story "Conversation with a Cupboard Man"
Juli Anne
Mind Map by Juli Anne, updated more than 1 year ago More Less
kuemli
Created by kuemli over 10 years ago
Juli Anne
Copied by Juli Anne almost 8 years ago
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Resource summary

"Conversation with a Cupboard Man" - Ian McEwan
  1. misleading title: pseudo-conversation - no direct speech of social worker ( more like monologue)
    1. Affinity to confessional or therapeutic narratives
      1. Initiation narrative: integration of young protagonist into society
        1. Main questions/issues
          1. adulthood/maturity
            1. "How did I become an adult? I'll tell you, I never did learn. I have to pretend. All the things you take for granted I have to do it all consciously. I'm always thinking about it, like I was on the stage."
            2. masculinity
              1. "He always wore blue suits. He owned a garage in Clapham and because he was big and successful he hated me at first sight. ... He was so big and strong and full of himself I suppose he couldn't bear to think that people like me existed."
              2. social norms and individual " normality"
                1. "You might say that at least he was normal. But I'd rather be me anyday."
                2. Individual identity (and its instability)
                  1. "He never remembered our last conversation or who he was. I don't think he knew who he was himself. Like he didn't have an identity of hiw own."
                3. critique
                  1. Indirect social critique: is it desirable to be a member of the society depicted in the story?
                    1. ambivalent reception perspective: Cupboard Man as "freak" or as social critic?
                    2. Ironic inversion of conventional initiation structure: Cupboard Man unable/ unwilling to integrate
                      1. no progression/ maturation, but regression and withdrawal from society
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