Araby Literary Analysis Essay

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Dillon Glezen Professor Anderson English 102 4 February 2017 The distant land of “Araby” The short story “Araby” which is a part of a collection of short stories in a book called “Dubliners” by James Joyce, published in 1914 is a story about a young boy’s childhood in North Richmond Street, Dublin. The story is written in the first person point of view with the young boy being the narrator of the story. The protagonist of the story becomes infatuated with the sister of his friend, Mangan who lives across from his house. One day Mangan’s sister approaches the protagonist and asks him if plans to visit “Araby”, which is a bazaar in Dublin. She tells him that she cannot make it to the bazaar because of a school event. The protagonist then tells …show more content…

Joyce asserts, “I lingered before her stall, though I knew my stay was useless, to make my interest in her wares seem the more real. Then I turned away slowly and walked down the middle of the bazaar. I allowed the two pennies to fall against the sixpence in my pocket”( 301). At this moment the protagonist realizes that he does not have enough money to a gift for Mangan’s sister and gravity of his financial situation. Additionally, Joyce affirms, “ Gazing up into the darkness I saw myself as a creature driven and derided by vanity; and my eyes burned with anguish and anger”(301). The protagonist had once dreamed about visiting “Araby” and was determined in his pursuit of love, but at this moment he is consumed with nothing but anger and agony. A Marxist critic would assumably take notice of the ending of the story as the protagonist's class level prevents him from continuing his relationship with Mangan’s sister. Among other critics, a historicist critic would presumably take note of Ireland’s long history in context to the story “Araby”. In the article “Invasions of Ireland from 1170-1320” Columbia University professor Simon Schama describes the colonization of The Irish by the British. Schama states,”The aggressive, expansionist English - under the king most famous for gobbling up duchies and kingdoms - take a look out west, see something they fancy, push their horses onto ships, bludgeon their way into the land they want with blood and fire, and force themselves on the peaceful natives as conquerors”(2). A historicist critic more specifically might acknowledge the fact that for more than 800 years Ireland had remained under British control and as a result Ireland had remained oppressed until the country attained its independence in the 20th century. The story, “Araby” was published in 1914, a time in which Ireland was

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