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The Decline of the American Mall  – Nic Rowan

One of the most quoted scenes in Don DeLillo’s comic novel White Noise involves a shopping spree. The book’s hero, a professor at a small Midwestern college, finds himself facing a midlife crisis and a creeping fear of death. A trip to the local mall revives his spirits. 

“I shopped with reckless abandon,” he says. “I shopped for immediate needs and distant contingencies. I shopped for its own sake, looking and touching, inspecting merchandise I had no intention of buying, then buying it.” 

The more he buys, the more he grows “in value and self-regard.” In the mall, he says, “I filled myself out, found new aspects of myself, located a person I’d forgotten existed.” He feels as if the building itself enhances his self-understanding. He feels as if he is bathed in sunlight. He keeps catching glimpses of his figure in the mirrors running up and down the concourse colonnades. He is enchanted by the food, delighted by the live band playing Muzak. The passage ends with a rhetorical flourish, which, typical of DeLillo, is as ironic as it is deadly earnest: “Voices rose ten stories from the gardens and promenades, a roar that echoed and swirled through the vast gallery, mixing with noises from the tiers, with shuffling feet and chiming bells, the hum of escalators, the sound of people eating, the human buzz of some vivid and happy transaction.”

I used to think that this was very funny stuff, describing a real instance of excess in American consumer culture. Now I am not so sure. Certainly DeLillo’s pyrotechnics do not reflect my own experiences at the mall. In fact, I cannot recall a single time in my 28 years of life that I have gone there willingly, let alone enthusiastically. It always feels like an ordeal, a chore, an embarrassment. Part of the problem, I suppose, is a matter of sex. I am a man, after all, and not naturally inclined to enjoy shopping. But the greater part, I suspect, derives from the fact that these days the mall is an unpleasant place to be. 

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