Different situations I found from the story that include the prostitute are;
when they walk deeper into the middle of the ballroom where the naked prostitute is, '...Yet I was strongly attracted and looked in spite of myself.' Since the prostitute symbolizes America, him being attracted to her is showing us that he likes America. But the prostitute is naked and being exploited by the white men for entertainment, the narrator hates this and does not want to look at her, but does in spite of how much he disagrees with what is happening.
Once they are all around her, she begins to dance, slowly and sensually. 'I felt transported. Then became aware of the clarinet playing and the big shots yelling at us.' The author is showing us that America is being trashed away for the pleasure of the with higher power. The narrator sees that the prostitute (America) is beautiful and become entranced by her 'sensual' dancing, but the he notices the clarinet and realizes that this woman is just being used to entertainment and nothing more. The wealthy white men are waisting America's attributes and turning them into a past time.
To back this up is when one of the surrounding merchants begins to watch her a little too intently. He was an 'intoxicated panda....This creature was completely hypnotizes.' All these people have grown so used to manipulating these prostitutes into sexual entertainment, and they have been doing it for long enough to not even realize or even care what they look like while all of this is going on.
These images and symbols contribute the story because they show what the character is being put through, the things he faces and the emotions he emits. And although the first time I read the story it sounded completely bazaar, and was rather random. It doesn't like a lot of things that happened in this story would really have ever happened but its right on the verge. Meaning, you have to really look for the symbols and know that they are there.
Did the book end satifactory?
17 years ago