Conflicts In White Noise, By Don Delillo

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White Noise is a novel written by Don DeLillo in 1985. This novel is based around the life of the main character, Jack Gladney and his family. At the beginning of the novel, Jack’s life is very dull and at a standpoint until one day due to an accident, a toxic gas has been released into the air. This situation changes the way his family lives and thinks and several secrets are revealed. Throughout the book, Jack faces many conflicts with himself that contribute to the way he thinks and reacts to things around him. Jack, who is also the narrator, occasionally finds deep meaning in random happenings and objects in order to understand his world better. This is caused by the obsessive age with social media, which he finds meaningless and tries …show more content…

Jack, who has a high position in the college, often worries that he will be established as lacking or incompetent of how he teaches and lives and will die insignificant. He has this aura around him in which he feels like he is not good enough and when he dies there will be no reasons of his remembering. Therefore, he surrounds himself with things that make him look weighty and dignified by association. For example, around campus he wears black spectacles and dramatic robes by which he is recognizable. Jack was influenced by Adolf Hitler, the most recognizable man and who over Jack created the department in the college. The more distinguishable he becomes, as he believes, the more remembered he will be after death. As well as death, the media in the novel plays a big part in this aspect. The media bases itself around strong and popular people. The media tries to convert others into perfection by displaying the perfect people on the screens. This affects Jack, and triggers his tendency to become more than he is and dignified by …show more content…

He finds himself thinking about it consciously and unconsciously. A result of this is his many sleepless nights. For example in chapter 11 (11.1), “Sweat trickled down my ribs. The digital reading on the clock-radio was 3:51. Always odd numbers at times like this. What does it mean? Is death odd-numbered?” Jack is spooked by death, believes he's always seeing signs of it. His paranoia and fear might influence his mind tricking him into believing things that are not really there, like in this example, he thinks that death comes in odd numbers and he is experiencing death at that moment. His mind is strongly wrapped around the idea of possible death at all times. When he woke up sweaty in the middle of the night and glanced over at his clock, he immediately thought of death. Jack’s mind works in such a way that it is almost programmed to believe that death is nearing by sending him “signs”. Later on in the novel, Jack and his wife, Babette confront each other about their mutual fear of death. Jack tries to comfort Babette through the following passage, "How can you be sure it is death you fear? Death is so vague. No one knows what it is, what it feels like or looks like. Maybe you just have a personal problem that surfaces in the form of a great universal subject." (26.80). Jack is sacred of death just as much as his wife is but does not want to believe it. He does not want to think that Babette's fears are connected

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