Situational Irony In Araby By James Joyce

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James Joyce’s short story, "Araby" is simply a story about an unnamed narrator’s first love. But in the roots of the short story is the setting of the toxic world he lives in that crushes his blooming pubescent. The title suggests, Mangan’s sister’s “brown figure” and the bazaar are exotic to this young boy who is blind to the reality of the world he lives in and they entice him. He will quickly realize the dream he is living in will be pushed away by the unforgiving nature of his world. North Richmond Street, where the narrator lives, is described using metaphors and shows the narrator's world he inhabits. The street is "blind,” a dead end, but the people who live there have an entitled attitude and therefore the houses emulate their inhabitants. The narrator talks about the priest who once lived there and there is mention of a convent, make the presumption that the people who live here would be in touch with their religious side. The situational irony is that anyone who is not spiritually “blind” would feel …show more content…

The narrator has watched her from afar, suggesting his loneliness and unsureness in himself to act on his love. When he finally talks to her and is told of the bazaar she wishes to attend but cannot, he makes it his mission to go and bring her back a gift. The uncle's failure to arrive home in time for him to make it to the bazaar while it is still open shows the uncle’s lack of empathy and a dissociation of what is was like for him as a young boy in love. The narrator waits all night in the "imperturbable" house with its “high, cold, empty, gloomy rooms.” The house, his aunt and uncle, and the entire street parallel a people who have good intentions but are too self-concerned that it blinds their sense of empathy and taking care of others. The setting has an effect of being tainted with

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