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John Updike 's A & P And James Joyce 's Araby

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Coming-of-age is a chapter that every individual must inevitably trek through in order to grow and mature into one’s own self. In John Updike’s A&P and James Joyce’s Araby, the theme of growth permeates throughout both narratives as their respective protagonists fabricate an ideal world from their own naive perspectives, only to shed their ignorant fantasies about how they believe to understand that the world can bend to their decisions to truly understand the cruelty behind world they live in: reaching maturity through the loss of innocence. Dismissing the pragmatic aspects of life can lead to the downfall of a person’s ideals as they eventually come to the realization that their dreams are impractical, and even impossible to bring to …show more content…

Instead, after overcoming obstacles like his apathetic uncle and the work of school, the boy arrives in Araby during closing time. After witnessing the store clerk’s lack of interest in him as a customer, he decides not to buy anything and then, upon his failure, he realizes how his crush will be fruitless through a negative epiphany. The boy inevitably understands the futility of his actions, as if the entire world was acting against his efforts to impress the girl he was obsessed with; his determination is suppressed after making it so far and failing at the final step of his mission. The inciting hope that the conversation instilled in him combined with the obstacles he had to overcome, only made his failure all the more bitter, but this harsh failure is the turning point that the boy needed in order to escape the childish and naive infatuation that he was experiencing. Failure was the lesson that made him understand that his love will remain unrequited, a realization that is the prerequisite for his sexual maturity. In a similar fashion, John Updike’s A&P portrays the mundane life of a cashier named Sammy who works in a grocery store called A&P. Sammy observes the people around him — customers and fellow employees — and refers to them as “sheep” because of their conformity to society. The story begins as three girls clad in bikinis walk into the store; they

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