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Four Summers | A Reading of Joyce Carol Oates’s "Four Summers"
In the following essay, Cushman provides an
analysis of ‘‘Four Summers,’’ asserting that Oates
is ‘‘more interested in psychology than sociology,’’
and finding the story ‘‘another version of American
Gothic.’’
Joyce Carol Oates’s ‘‘Four Summers’’ is a rich, rewarding, complex story that has received no critical attention. Featured in James H. Pickering’s popular anthology, Fiction 100, the story is being read these days by a large number of students and teachers. In this essay I will try to account for the story’s effectiveness.
Mary Kathryn Grant has pointed out that in ‘‘Oates’s works three themes—women, city, and community—merge into all-too-real nightmare.’’ All these ingredients are present in ‘‘Four Summers.’’ The protagonist...
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- Four Summers: Introduction
- Four Summers: Summary
- Four Summers: Joyce Carol Oates Biography
- Four Summers: Themes
- Four Summers: Style
- Four Summers: Historical Context
- Four Summers: Critical Overview
- Four Summers: Character Analysis
- Four Summers: Essays and Criticism
- Four Summers: Compare and Contrast
- Four Summers: Topics for Further Study
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