Zusammenfassung der Ressource
"Conversation with a Cupboard Man"- I. McEwan
- misleading title:
pseudo-conversation - no
direct speech of social worker
( more like monologue)
- Affinity to confessional or
therapeutic narratives
- Initiation narrative:
integration of young
protagonist into society
- Main questions/issues
- adulthood/maturity
- "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."
- masculinity
- "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."
- social norms and individual " normality"
- "You might say that at least he was normal. But I'd rather be me anyday."
- Individual identity (and its instability)
- "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."
- critique
- Indirect social critique: is it desirable to be
a member of the society depicted in the
story?
- ambivalent reception perspective: Cupboard Man as "freak" or as social critic?
- Ironic inversion of conventional
initiation structure: Cupboard Man
unable/ unwilling to integrate
- no progression/ maturation, but
regression and withdrawal from
society