The Pool as Page
Short Story Form, Fluid Symbolism and Existential Drift in John Cheever’s “The Swimmer”
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13136/2281-4582/2026.i27.1721Keywords:
Postwar American fiction, John Cheever, Short story, Swimming, SuburbiaAbstract
This essay offers a critical analysis of John Cheever’s “The Swimmer” (1964), proposing a conceptual frame that establishes a structural isomorphism between the acts of swimming and writing. Both are construed as disciplined, rhythmically regulated practices that demand a delicate balance between instinct and control, sustaining narrative continuity even as moments of disruption emerge, and moving between sensory immersion and reflective detachment.
The analysis situates Cheever’s narrative within the broader tradition of the short story, conceptualizing the form as a pliant formal apparatus uniquely attuned to articulating the fleeting, and disjunctive qualities of twentieth-century subjectivity, as well as the epistemological instabilities of contemporary experience.
Within this framework, swimming is approached simultaneously as lived, embodied practice and as a symbolic and structural device. The protagonist’s aquatic journey is thus examined not only as a physical undertaking, but also as a stratified narrative operation through which existential dislocation, mnemonic drift, and the fluidity of identity are staged. Water – at once an emblematic motif and an immersive setting – emerges as a liminal space onto which individual memory and collective cultural tensions are projected, particularly those rooted within the ideological topographies of postwar American suburbia.
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