Bodies (short story)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Published inHarper's Bazaar
Publication dateFebruary 1970
"Bodies"
Short story by Joyce Carol Oates
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Publication
Published inHarper's Bazaar
Publication dateFebruary 1970

"Bodies" is a short story by Joyce Carol Oates originally published in Harper's Bazaar (February 1970), and first collected in The Wheel of Love and Other Stories (1970) by Vanguard Press.[1]

Pauline Ressner is a 29-year-old instructor at an art institute. She is a sculptor, specializing in the human head. She lives with her mother in their Victorian era house. A tall, striking woman, she is single-mindedly dedicated to her work and fulfilled by it. She maintains a cool detachment from her students, who address her as "Miss Ressner". Though she is aware that her beauty is attractive to men and some women, she routinely deflects these advances. She has no social or sexual life.

Through a mutual acquaintance, Pauline is introduced to Anthony Drayer, a man in his mid-thirties who takes an immediate interest in her and attempts to engage her in casual conversation. He does not appear to have any vocation and she detects that he is not well-groomed. Annoyed, she politely excuses herself and departs. She subsequently sees Anthony repeatedly around the institute, and learns that he has made inquiries about her students. When Anthony approaches her again, she feels threatened, and attempts to dismiss him with a curt smile. He persists, asking her questions she finds offensive. He is clearly obsessed with her, but is good-natured. In desperation, Pauline blurts out: "I don't have time to talk to you. I don't go out with people, I'm not the way you think..."[2] Anthony registers anger, and rebukes her. He encourages her to leave: "Don't run - I won't follow you!"[2]

The encounter has traumatized Pauline, and she suffers from lurid, disturbing dreams. She has bouts of malaise. Pauline recalls that in her early twenties she had been in love with an elderly art instructor and two other men, both young. In all these, she drew near but regained control of her emotions, and nothing came of these: "So it had ended. She was complete...feeling totally herself once more."[3]

At a local bookstore, Pauline is suddenly assaulted by Anthony, wielding a knife. He grabs her, and without a word, slashes his own throat. His blood splashes on her clothes as he falls dying at her feet. In the aftermath, Pauline's internal monologues and phantasmagorical images take hold of her mind. She is convinced that the madman's blood has spawned a fetus she carries in her womb.

As Pauline descends into madness, her mother commits her to a mental hospital.[4]

Theme

Footnotes

Sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI