The works of John Updike
Existence is like a creature that hides and then reveals itself. Existence is defined in Webster’s New World Dictionary as the "state or fact of being." This existence strives to reach truth which is located beyond space and time, yet truth must be grasped by existence nevertheless. This is accomplished through ritual, which can bring about the capturing of the inconceivable.Edward P. Vargo stated that John Updike uses ritual "to fulfill the great desire of capturing the past, to make the present meaningful through connection with the past, to overcome death, and to grasp immortality" (Contemporary Vol. 7 487). He combines the aspects and meaning of seemingly unimportant ritual along with mankind’s desire for a relationship with God to form truth and value for the past, present, and future. Updike uses his talents as a writer to bring together the conceivable and the inconceivable.John Updike implements his philosophies and ideals in a way that brings together existence with meaning. "Updike is in the best sense of the word an intellectual novelist, a novelist of paradox, tension and complexity who as a college wit in the fifties learned that we are all symbols and inhabit symbols" (World 3752). Updike uses his be
Updike sees his books "as objects, with different shapes and textures and the mysteriousness of anything that exists. He sees them as "many-sided and intellectual designs. John Updike illustrates the problems of faith and the difficulty of moral decisions in The Centaur. " It serves "as a dynamic guide for mankind’s present life and activities. " He takes an interest in them, and they have meaning. It is the final step as one moves from his present world to the next one. Most people associate ritual as a process that is repeated "without any thought and without any significant meaning" (Contemporary Vol. He writes in a way that creates new ideas and frames of thought. Society has become empty and petty, degenerating ritual into "an empty form" that fills "the void with meaningless, unthinking activity" (Contemporary Vol.
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