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Allen GinsbergA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Ginsberg employs Greek mythology as a literary metaphor for life and death. In Greek myth, Charon acted as ferryman to the dead and was responsible for transporting souls of the newly deceased from the world of the living to the underworld, or Hades, via the river Styx. Lethe is also a reference from the same Greek mythology. As one of the five rivers to Hades, the river Lethe gave amnesia to anyone who drank from it. Charon “poling” his ferry across the Lethe river provides Ginsberg the opportunity to imbue his poem with a twisted nod to classical literature while making a metaphor for death and, ultimately, posing a larger question to Whitman.
Since Ginsberg’s father Louis was an English teacher and poet, though notably more conservative than Ginsberg, it makes sense that the poet was particularly well-versed in literature. The poem’s references to Greek mythology not only help to make a strong image-based metaphor, but they provide Ginsberg with a moment in which he can nod to his deep understanding of his craft. Ginsberg’s choice to switch the name of the river, from Styx to Lethe shows that the poet has control over his craft, so much so as to deviate from formal rules and understandings.
Walt Whitman is used as a point of reference for Ginsberg to discuss a variety of things within his poem. Using Whitman as the addressee of the poem not only allows for the speaker to brush upon more personal issues, such as loneliness and isolation, but it provides a lens with which to view the world surrounding the speaker. Ginsberg uses Whitman to probe deeper thoughts and questions about the state of America—its consumerism, in particular.
The supermarket in “A Supermarket in California” is an apt metaphor for America as it highlights the capitalism underlying the foundations of the country. Through the supermarket, Ginsberg critiques the American dream, including the respective consumerism and the hollowness it can ultimately produce. Ginsberg’s speaker is lonely, isolated, and daydreaming of connection with a kindred spirit despite being in areas he describes as populated with people, houses, and cars. The supermarket also serves as a point of contrast for the speaker and Whitman, who in his lifetime did not experience the phenomenon of the modern grocery store. Within the poem, Whitman’s awe is almost always used to highlight the absurdity of the supermarket, where the meat in refrigerators is entirely removed from any source context and where everything one can imagine is available for purchase.
By Allen Ginsberg