![]() In trying to capture an America of the time, Updike loses control of his main character, who proves to be far less licentious than this novel would have us believe. Rabbit Redux (1971), however, seems to slip a little due to the forced insertion of the late 60s and early 70s. Updike says, "the price society pays for unrestrained motion was on my mind." 2 The historical context guided Updike's theme, but did not determine it. ![]() seems to have contributed to the content and message. The book began as part of a parallel with The Centaur, in an attempt to "illustrate the polarity between running and plodding." 1 The context of the late 1950s U.S. The influence of the culture on both Updike and Rabbit seems most natural in the first novel, Rabbit, Run (1960). Each of the Rabbit stories locates its events in a precise moment in American history, and features characters trying to navigate through that moment. In John Updike's series of works about Rabbit Angstrom, we find an interesting relationship between a character and his (and Updike's) historical context. Updike and Rabbit John Updike and Rabbit Angstrom ![]()
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