Araby Analysis

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In James Joyce's short story, "Araby", the speaker's youthful idealism and naïve fantasies are left shattered when a trip to the bazaar awakens him to the dark realities of his life. The narrator, a nameless adolescent Catholic schoolboy, is living in an oppressive and joyless environment, yet he is able to detach from the frustrating grimness of the surroundings by immersing himself in a confused infatuation for a neighborhood girl. With unrestrained enthusiasm, the boy allows himself to be consumed with foolish lust and adoration for a girl whom he "did not know if ›he would ever speak to" (Araby 112). In truth the girl, sister to the boy's friend Mangan, is a virtual stranger, but in his mind the boy has transformed the girl into an …show more content…

When the girl finally speaks to the boy she confides that she could not go to the bazaar Araby, and the boy eagerly takes this opportunity to get closer to the object of his immature romanticism by promising that he will go to the bazaar and return with a small memento for her. As he did with the girl, the boy allows his idyllic fantasies to transform his image of the bazaar into something that it is not. The boy envisions Araby as an exotic enchanted place able to somehow grant him the ability to fulfill his quixotic desires. When Araby turns out to be a drab dark place, lacking any of the vitality and exoticness the boy was depending would turn dreams into truth, the boy is faced with the harsh reality that his fantasies are not actuality, and he realizes that his devotion to this uncorroborated image of a girl does not separate him from the bleakness of his everyday life; in fact, the disappointment that is Araby awakens the boy to the fact that his immature dreams have blinded him to the cold and stagnant reality of his ordinary …show more content…

The one exemption in this portrait of darkness is Magnan's sister, whom he portrays as the only source of light in this bleak world. The boy described the street he lived, North Richmond Street, on as "being blind", the houses of the street as having "brown imperturbable faces", and the rooms of his own house as being "musty from having been enclosed too long" and "littered with old useless papers" (Joyce 111). These descriptions serve to convey how repressed the boy feels by his stagnant surroundings. In contrast to the hard dark portrait of North Richmond Street, the descriptions of the girl seem riddled with lightness and ease. The image of the girl was always illuminated, whether it was "her figure defined by the light from ›a half-opened door" (Joyce 111) or "the light from the lamp . . . ›lighting up her hair" (Joyce 112), and her every movement, even "the soft rope of her hair ›tossing from side to side" (Joyce 111), suggested a soft easiness. In his mind the boy transformed the image of the girl into an angelic portrait worthy of religious devotion. The boy's infatuation pervades his every action and he clings to the image of the girl "even in places the most hostile to romance" (Joyce 111), as if his feelings were a "chalice" that could guide him "safely through a throng of foes" (Joyce 112). The boy is blinded to the bleakness of his existence by

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