preview

Literary Criticism Of Araby By James Joyce

Satisfactory Essays

Mackenzie Jacobs
Literary Critique
07/10/17
Literary Critique
James Joyce’s “Araby” is an emotional short story of a nameless boy in Dublin who has a typical crush on the sister of his friend, and because of it, journeys to a bazaar or world fair called Araby. This is the basis for the entire text, and the ideas Joyce promotes revolve around how the boy reacts to these feelings. Joyce spends most of the story introducing the boy’s thoughts on the area in which he lives, and similarly how he feels about the life he has lived thus far; he builds up the boy’s disgust for the simple aspects of his daily life, and how he feels bored with where he lives and what he does. Then, in contrast, he shows us what actually excites the boy; the girl with whom he is infatuated. We learn a lot from the boy in “Araby”, most notably how he will act based on his heart and ignore his logical reason, but also how these actions will never lead him too far away from what is considered to be his personal destiny.
The story begins with a description of the setting. The boy feels very emotionless about where he lives, and how his neighborhood appears. He doesn’t find any excitement in it, and Joyce constantly uses negative adjectives in pointing out how the buildings represent this. Joyce writes, “The other houses of the street, conscious of decent lives within them, gazed at one another with brown imperturbable faces.” we imagine this picture of stillness and dullness. Rather quickly we are

Get Access