Talented Mr. Ripley
The titular character of Patricia Highsmith's novel The Talented Mr. Ripley is driven by what might be called a pathological desire for commodities. Tom Ripley has essentially bought into the promise of post-war capitalism to the point that he is willing to kill for it, thus undercutting the hegemony of capitalism itself by demonstrating the powerlessness of wealth in the face of simple physical violence. When examining Tom's desire for commodities, consumer goods, and material pleasures, it becomes clear that this desire, which is the main symptom of a dedication to capitalism, serves to repress the unconscious, unexpressed knowledge that money is ultimately meaningless, an ephemeral stand-in for other commodities, which are themselves ultimately stand-ins for real power, which is to say physical violence. Thus, Tom's murder of Dickie represents a kind of psychological trauma resulting from the violent eruption of the unconscious, a trauma that can only be rectified through the revaluation of commodities that occurs through the subsequent narrative importance of Dickie's rings. By the end of the novel, Tom has reaffirmed his belief in the ascendancy of capitalism and commodities, but the threat of physical violence nevertheless lingers at the edge of his perception in the form of an ever-present fear of the police.
That Tom values commodities, consumer goods, and material pleasures is certain; in fact, when he is introduced to the reader, his thoughts almost always return to the issue of wealth or possessions. When Tom first recalls who Dickie is, the first thing he remembers after Dickie's height and hair color is the fact that "he had quite a bit of money" (Highsmith 4). Later, when he pauses to reflect on the conversation, Tom thinks that "Dickie was probably having the time of his life over there. An income, a house, a boat" (Highsmith 7). Tom compares this to his own situation of "living from week to week. No bank account. Dodging cops now for the first time in his life" (Highsmith 7-8). Despite the somewhat unique perspective that Tom's intelligence and sociopathic tendencies grant him, he is nevertheless entirely engaged by capitalism's insistence on the value and importance of commodities and wealth.
It is important to point out that Tom's valuation of commodities and wealth is not born out of class jealousy, but rather is the result of Tom's uncanny ability to mimic and adapt to whatever situation he finds himself in. Tom has a knack for telling people what they want to hear, and is so chameleon-like in this ability that once he gets going, he could be maniacally polite for perhaps another whole hour" (Highsmith 9). In the same way, Tom has simply adapted to the situation he finds himself in, using his considerable talent for adaptation to become the ultimate capitalist, unhindered by morality or conscience in his quest for wealth and consumption. When Tom imagines that "Dickie was lucky," he is not criticizing or questioning the underlying social, political, and economic conditions that account for that "luck," but rather is acknowledging that Dickie has a privileged position within consumer society (Highsmith 8). As a result, Tom is not jealous of Dickie or Mr. Greenleaf, but rather realizes that he could be a better capitalist than either of them.
However, the very thing that allows Tom to be such a good capitalist is also the thing that threatens to undermine his faith in capitalism, because his amoral approach to life (which includes a willingness to resort to physical violence) implicitly demonstrates the inferior, imaginary (in the sense of being socially-constructed) power of wealth in the face of the concrete power of physical violence. One cannot say that Tom's desire for commodities "corrupts" him in the sense that he would have necessarily been moral even without his materialism, but instead one can note that his materialism, and the rules of capitalism...
Talented Mr. Ripley, Patricia Highsmith has created a character who is both charming and disturbed, but the reader gets involved because we see everything from Ripley's point-of-view. From the author shows us a young man who is willing to break the law, although he does not seem dangerous. He wonders, "Was this the kind of man they would send after him? ... He didn't look like a policeman ... " (p.
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