Thursday, December 19, 2019

Comparative Analysis Of Epiphany, From James Joyce s...

Joey Gill ENG-L 204 Paper 1, Prompt D A Comparative Analysis of Epiphany, from James Joyce’s â€Å"Araby† and â€Å"The Dead† James Joyce elaborately portrays the complexity of the human male psyche through his protagonists in â€Å"Araby† and â€Å"The Dead.† Through the use of first person perspective, each protagonists’ true motivations and perceptions of reality are betrayed by Joyce, therefore allowing the reader to fully understand the fallacies and complexities within each character. Through the depictions of such complexities, Joyce is able to leverage the subtle, yet substantial, power of epiphany in order to unite every aspect of each protagonist’s complex nature, as well as display what he means to suggest through the epiphanies his protagonists experience. Beyond sharing the same author, the unnamed protagonist in â€Å"Araby†, who’ll hence be referred to as the young boy, shares similarities with the protagonist in â€Å"The Dead†, Gabriel . Initially, both characters are seen as male figures who adhere to the social etiquette of their economic class, and both are conflicted by their female interests. The young boy’s sole desire in â€Å"Araby† is to win the affection of a young lady, known only as Mangan’s sister. Similarly, after Gabriel and his wife, Gretta, attend an annual dinner party, Gabriel is overcome with an incessant desire to be intimate with Gretta. Both of their efforts to submit the woman to their desires inevitably fail due to both protagonists having a perceived understanding

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