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Araby, By James Joyce

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James Joyce’s short fiction, “Araby”, speaks of the loss of innocence when one enters adulthood. The narrator of “Araby” reflects back to his childhood and the defining moment when he reached clarity on the world he stood before. The young boy, living in a world lifeless and religious influence, becomes consumed with the lust of a neighbouring girl. The girl, Mangan, is symbolically the narrator’s childhood obsession with growing up. As she resembles the desire to become an adult, the Araby is the enchanted vision of adulthood. By the end of the short story, he realizes the bareness of 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 …show more content…

Like his feelings, he does not grasp what Mangan is completely. Joyce describes her in bursts, “her figure defined by the light of the half-opened door … [h]er dress swung as she moved her body, and the soft rope of her hair tossed from side to side” (1). The description is an idea of the girl but not the girl as a whole. She has no personality, no hopes and dreams, dictated to the reader. Mangan is simply the embodiment of temptation for the young narrator. The temptation, however, turned into pure lust at the thought of her since “[h]er image accompanied [him] even in places the most hostile to romance” (1). The daydreams are not as innocent as Joyce would like to believe. They are the sexual longings of an adolescent boy. It becomes so overwhelming that when he is alone he comes to his sexual peak in a very religious manner: “All my senses seem to desire to veil themselves and, feeling that I was about to slip from them, I press the palms of my hands together until they trembled, murmuring: ‘O love! O love!’ many times” (2). This chaste, yet sexual, action brings him into the honeymoon of adulthood. Mangan “[a]t last she spoke to [him]” (2), only due to him finally reaching adulthood status. She finishes her place as the serpent giving the narrator the fruit of knowledge by tempting him with the idea of the Araby. She speaks of it being a wonderful place, while spinning her silver bracelet around her wrist, like

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