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aub_admin October 31, 2017 35 Views

A Shattering Epiphany in James Joyce’s “Araby”

Authors & Affiliation

Ms. Rokeya & A.K. Zunayet Ahammed
Department of English
Asian University of Bangladesh (AUB)

Publication Info

Journal: ALLS
Vol: 8, Issue: 5 | October 2017
ISSN: 2203-4714

Araby: A Journey through Disillusionment and Self-Realisation

Abstract

This article attempts to show an adolescent boy’s continuing process of self-realisation through his disillusionment with the bleak reality of Dublin in the early twentieth century in the short story “Araby” by James Joyce. Brought up in the drab and deadening surroundings with his uncle and aunt in conservative Catholic cultures, the lonely sensitive boy finds no outlets to express his feelings. Torn between harsh reality and imagination, the boy searches light and a relish of romance. Amidst the darkness, a girl, Mangan’s sister, is the only light in his romantic vision. The boy, however, wishes to win her over by bringing her a gift from Araby, an oriental bazaar, which is also an epitome of ideal beauty, love and romance to him. But as he grows up, he discovers that the bazaar is beset by difficulties of the adult world where he finds no way to dream. There he is exposed to a new odious situation which he never thought before. And he undergoes a shattering epiphany which results in realisation and maturation. Indeed, here Joyce keenly evinces how a young boy gains sharp insights into life and reality.
Keywords: Araby, Bleakness, Boy, Disillusionment, Epiphany, Love, Mangan’s Sister, James Joyce, Self-realisation.