Conflict Between Desire for Individual Freedom and Social Responsibility: A Comparative Study of Oe's A Personal Matterand Updike's Rabbit, Run
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Abstract
To read John Updike's novelRabbit Runand Kenjaburo Oe's novelA Personal
Matteris to decode both the protagonists Rabbit and Bird respectively in the midst of
psychological tension created by the routine of unfulfilling married life with their wives
and children. They can neither suppress their desires to be free nor can avoid the social
responsibilities, so torn between two conflicting choices. Rabbit and Bird both having
name from non-human world, represent animal nature and try to fulfill their suppressed
desires by neglecting their familial responsibilities andtaking shelter in sexual
perversion and alcoholism. Rabbit in theRabbit Runguided by Id, the psychological
motif he inhabits, runs forever instead of returning to his family to cope with the reality
and Bird, in A Personal Matter, though guided by the same motif returns to his familial
responsibilities when his Super-ego creates an unconscious sense of guilt. However, the
desired goal of both of the protagonists remains unfulfilled throughout.
