Free Term Papers on Araby

OPPapers.com Essay Index >> English >> Araby

We have many free term papers and essays on Araby. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.

Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. Araby And James Joyce

    Araby and James Joyce. The short story “Araby” is clearly identifiable as the work
    of James Joyce. ... Works Cited >Coulthard, AR "Joyce's Araby." Explicator. ...

  2. The Araby

    The Araby. The story, "Araby" by James Joyce, is a short story about a young boy's
    life and his quest to impress the young girl for whom he has feelings. ...

  3. Araby

    araby. When reading the story of “Araby” it is easy to notice the struggles
    of the times in Ireland. From the way Joyce describes ...

  4. The Religious Undertones In James Joyce'S Araby

    The Religious Undertones in James Joyce's Araby. ... The introduction to Araby sets the
    religious tones, which flow through a neighborhood, dark and full of desire. ...

  5. A&Amp;P And Araby

    A&P And Araby. The Boys of “A & P” and “Araby” John Updike's
    “A & P” and James Joyce's “Araby” are very similar. ...

View More Papers...

Araby

Submitted by springixora on May 12, 2006

Category: English
Words: 312 | Pages: 2
Views: 152
Popularity Rank: 65,989
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

The settings in Araby
The setting in James Joyce’s “Araby” is more than background, it is imagery that illuminates the conflict of the story. North Richmond street, where the protagonist lives, is “blind,” “silent,” and “sombre,” with “dark muddy lanes” and houses that “gazed at eachother with brown imperturbable faces.” This atmosphere provides a marked contrast with the protagonist’s youthful energy and vitality, but the blindness is echoed in the attitude of his aunt and uncle. On the evening that the boy was planning to visit the bazaar, his uncle forgets about the plans, so by the time he arrives home it is almost too late for the boy to make the journey.
The priest, who had in the narrator’s house as a tenant, had died, leaving his books to yellow and his bicycle pump to rust in the back yard. The essay suggests that the description of items that have grown useless serves to “deepen, through a sense of a dead past, the spiritual and intellectual stagnation of the present.”
In this bleak place, the narrator’s spirit is captivated by a girl, Mangan’s sister. His imagination makes her into the princess of a fairytale, not his playmate’s older sister who lives down the street. This disparity between the real and the narrator’s fantasies ironically foreshadow what will end up with the narrator’s dreams.
After the narrator was excited at the prospect of buying a token to ensure his place in the girl’s heart, he hurries to the bazaar and finds it almost closed. It is not at all what he imagined, he realizes that his “stay was useless” and he would not have anything to give to the girl. Overall, I found the essay on setting and atmosphere quite helpful in my analysis of Araby. Looking carefully at the physical details in the story was essential to understanding the narrator’s personal journey.

You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!