A Confederacy of Dunces

A Confederacy of Dunces

by

John Kennedy Toole

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A Confederacy of Dunces: Chapter 11, Part 4 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
George waits outside Paradise Vendors for a chance to approach Ignatius. George can tell by the way Ignatius talks that he is educated, and he decides to try and use this to persuade Ignatius to let him store his packages in the hot dog cart. George watches as Ignatius leaves the garage, pushing his cart along. George follows him and watches as Ignatius gets the cart stuck in a tram line on the road. Ignatius tries to free the cart, but it tips over. George hurries to his aid.
George hopes to flatter Ignatius so that he can get his own way. George is not a naturally charitable person and only helps Ignatius with the cart to get something for himself later. This suggests that, in this instance, George is able to hide his selfish interests behind a veneer of helpfulness, similar to characters like Mrs. Levy and Ignatius himself.
Themes
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Hypocrisy and Self-Interest  Theme Icon
Ignatius tries to send George away; he dislikes the boy and thinks George is a criminal. A tram approaches on the track and honks at Ignatius to get out of the way. Finally, he allows George to help him lift the cart. George gives Ignatius $2 and Ignatius eats a hot dog to calm himself down. George then launches into his plan and tells Ignatius that he will pay him $8 a day to leave the packages (which he claims are school supplies) in Ignatius’s cart.
Ignatius feels that modern society is corrupt and that he is superior to it. He believes that the medieval period, which he studied, was a far superior age because ordinary people knew their place within strict, class-based hierarchies and criminals, like George, were punished.
Themes
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Hypocrisy and Self-Interest  Theme Icon
Ignatius does not believe George and grabs one of the packets from him. George tries to get it back, but Ignatius easily holds him off and takes out one of the photographs which are stored inside the parcels. Ignatius is amazed. The photos are of a naked woman, posed suggestively with a globe and a piece of chalk. Her face is hidden behind a copy of The Consolation of Philosophy. Ignatius wonders who this goddess could be and notices that there is an address written on the packet.
Although Ignatius dislikes sex and displays of sexuality, he is attracted to the woman in the photo because she poses with his favorite book. Ignatius assumes, therefore, that the woman is a medieval scholar like himself and that she, too, must be morally pure and see the failings of modern society. This suggests that, while Ignatius shuns human contact, underneath he secretly longs for companionship and someone who understands and accepts his unconventional worldview. Although he is repulsed by sex, he romanticizes emotional connection.
Themes
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Sexuality, Attraction, and Repulsion Theme Icon
Appearance, Identity, and Disguise  Theme Icon
Ignatius tells George that he may store the photos, but only if he watches the wagon that afternoon while Ignatius attends a pressing appointment. George protests, but Ignatius tells him that he will set his friend, Patrolman Mancuso, on George if he does not agree. George asks who Patrolman Mancuso is and is horrified to discover that he is the cop from the bathroom. George grudgingly agrees to watch the cart and Ignatius strides off down the street to the cinema.
It is pure chance that Ignatius brings up Patrolman Mancuso, with whom George has had an earlier run-in. Although Ignatius does not know about this, his words have the unintended consequence of frightening George because George believes Mancuso is specifically on his case. This suggests that, although people may not always acknowledge or understand the consequences of their actions, these consequences still exist and can manifest in fateful ways.
Themes
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Freedom Theme Icon
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The film, starring an actress whom Ignatius particularly dislikes, has a series of graphic love scenes. Ignatius grows incensed during these and protests loudly that the actress should be whipped. After the film, he returns to the wagon to relieve George and tells him that he will meet him at the same time the next day. Ignatius then sets out to find the mystery woman from the pornographic photo. He heads for the address on the packet and, while on his way, daydreams about Myrna’s fury when he writes to tell her of his tryst with a fellow medievalist.
Ignatius’s reaction to sex seems excessive and suggests that, although he outwardly rejects sex, inwardly he desires it and resents this about himself. He associates sexuality with impurity and vulgarity because he believes in a medieval worldview, in which sex was considered sinful. It is ironic that Ignatius has this reaction to a love scene, but then sets off in search of a pornographic model. However, Ignatius differentiates between lust and spiritual connection, which he feels he might achieve with a woman who shares his intellectual perspective.
Themes
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Sexuality, Attraction, and Repulsion Theme Icon
Ignatius arrives at the address and is amazed to find that it belongs to the Night of Joy club. There is a sign on the window which announces a show by “Harlett O’Hara and pet.” Ignatius collapses on the sidewalk for a rest. Lana sees him through the door and leans out to shout abuse at him. She does not want him near her club as he is “bad for her investment.” Darlene notices Ignatius, too, and begins to shout at him for the way he treats his mother. Lana orders Jones to shoo Ignatius away, but Jones says he is not paid to be a bouncer.
It is ironic that Lana, who runs a strip club (something Ignatius views as the height of modern vulgarity) sees Ignatius as someone vulgar and inferior. This suggests that morality is partially subjective and that, while American society claims to be free, people are still often judged based on their looks or career. Lana also judges Jones based on his appearance as a black man, and continues to exploit him in his role knowing that he will stay in order to avoid being arrested for vagrancy.
Themes
Medievalism, Modernity, and Fate Theme Icon
The Legacy of Slavery Theme Icon
Sexuality, Attraction, and Repulsion Theme Icon
Freedom Theme Icon
Appearance, Identity, and Disguise  Theme Icon
Hypocrisy and Self-Interest  Theme Icon
At last, Jones reluctantly approaches Ignatius. Ignatius tells Jones that he has been fighting for black rights very recently, and Jones asks him if he means the riot at Levy Pants. Ignatius says yes, and Jones asks Ignatius why, with all his education, he works as a hot dog vendor. Ignatius says that he likes the outdoors and Jones says that, if he were educated, he’d get himself a good job. Ignatius sneers at this and asks Jones if any of the women at the Night of Joy like to read.
Ignatius looks down on Jones because Jones wants to improve his situation in life. Ignatius believes that aspiring to a life of material comfort is shallow and stupid—this is hypocritical, however, since Ignatius lives a life of extreme comfort and laziness. He is oblivious to his privilege as a white man, which has up until recently allowed him to remain unemployed despite vagrancy laws. Jones, in comparison, is forced to work for less than minimum wage because he is black and will surely be imprisoned if he does not, since vagrancy laws applied more strictly to black people than to white. Jones views Ignatius’s choice to be a hot dog vendor as a waste of his privilege.
Themes
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The Legacy of Slavery Theme Icon
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Jones says that one of the girls always gives him things to read, and Ignatius asks where he can find her. Jones cannot believe his luck. He tells Ignatius to come and see her show. Ignatius realizes that the woman is Harlett O’Hara and asks Jones if Lana will be present on Harlett’s opening night. Jones says no, and Ignatius asks Jones to reserve him a table.
Jones wants to use Ignatius to achieve his own goals. He knows that Ignatius will cause chaos in the club and upset Lana and plans to use this to shut the club down and free himself from service there.
Themes
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Hypocrisy and Self-Interest  Theme Icon
Jones says he will and asks Ignatius if he likes being a vagrant. Ignatius replies that he likes it very much and that Jones should embrace his vagrancy and be glad that he does not have to deal with the pressure of being white and ambitious. Ignatius leaves and Jones thinks that Ignatius really is a “freak.”
Ignatius does not realize that he is privileged and that, if he were black, he could not spend all day wondering the streets as a vendor because he would be treated as a criminal and hassled by the police. Racism and discriminatory vagrancy laws meant that, while it was illegal for anyone to be unemployed in New Orleans, these laws were applied more strictly to black people than to white.
Themes
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Freedom Theme Icon
Ignatius feels that his luck has changed. He gives Mr. Clyde a portion of his money from George and then cheerfully heads home. When he arrives at his house, he finds Irene on the phone to Santa. When Irene hears Ignatius arrive, she abruptly stops the conversation and drops her voice to a whisper. She and Santa have been talking about having Ignatius incarcerated. Santa thinks that Claude will soon propose to Irene and says she will pick Irene up that evening to go bowling.
Ignatius feels that his fortune is decided by the medieval goddess Fortuna, and that he therefore has no control over his luck. Ignatius suspects that Santa and Irene want to have him locked up because he does not fit into conventional society. Ignatius is right to think this, and the novel suggests that those who do not fit in are persecuted by mainstream society, even though America claims to be a free country that values individualism.
Themes
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Freedom Theme Icon
Hypocrisy and Self-Interest  Theme Icon
When Irene hangs up the phone, she demands Ignatius’s earnings for the day. Ignatius indignantly refuses and Irene snatches the pornographic photo from his pocket. Irene bursts into tears when she sees it and Ignatius begs her not to slander the name of the presumably brilliant woman in the picture. The phone rings and Irene sobs that it is Mr. Levy—he has phoned twice that day.
Although Ignatius believes that modern society is overly liberal about sex, Irene’s reaction shows that this is not the case and that pornography was still considered shameful in 1960s America. Although Ignatius does not believe that he can control the consequences of his actions, his behavior at Levy Pants—when he wrote a rude letter to a client—now comes back to haunt him.
Themes
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Sexuality, Attraction, and Repulsion Theme Icon
Ignatius answers the phone and puts on a fake voice. He asks Mr. Levy what he wants and then tells him that Ignatius has been committed to a mental institution. Mr. Levy is shocked to hear this but asks if Ignatius can have visitors. Ignatius says he can, and then hangs up the phone.
Ignatius clearly feels, on some level, that he is likely to be put in a mental institution. Although Ignatius does not believe he is insane, he understands that American society views those who do not conform as insane, and is aware that his own behavior is atypical and could be considered mad.
Themes
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Hypocrisy and Self-Interest  Theme Icon