Richard Connell most often uses similes and metaphors to convey the mood and tone of the work. In the beginning, for example, it is said the darkness and mist are “like a moist black velvet” referencing the velvet as a thick cloth covering them just as the darkness covers their visual senses.…
Simile and metaphor are frequent modes that Baldwin exercised to present imagery. “For a moment nobody’s talking, but every face looks darkening, like the sky outside” (Baldwin 244) is an example of simile in which the word “like” is used to compare two different ideas, drawing the reader into the story through a mental picture. The author also applied the use of simile to liken a boy whistling a tune to a songbird (239). In the second paragraph of “Sonny Blue’s”, Baldwin uses metaphor to reflect the pain that the narrator feels…
In short, ‘Araby’ is busy and crowded with people although these come and go in a breath. The first mentioned character, the dead priest, lingers more than most. He was the former tenant of the house that the boy now lives in with his aunt and uncle. The priest left behind books that influence the boy and a rusty bicycle pump. The latter is found in a backyard that contains an apple tree, a suggestion of an edenic world in a story laden with spiritual and churchly trappings. The bicycle pump, says Tindall, commenting on its appearance in the Circe section of Ulysses, “probably means spiritual inflation.” There are equally strong references to the mercantile. We learn, for example, that the priest left his money to charitable institutions and left to his sisters his furniture. The three books seem strange ones for a priest: a novel by Scott, memoirs of Vidocq and a devotional treatise. The latter may be an orthodox, if mediocre, work or it may be the work of an anti-Catholic writer whose last name is Seller, a fitting name for this story where the mercantile theme is so strong.…
Textual analysis of The Sisters reveals numerous literary devices that explicate the theme of the repression of possibility by the city of its people. Throughout, Joyce uses symbolism, metaphors, and ellipsis to emphasise his themes whilst allowing the reader to infer its meanings without the need to describe them explicitly. The italicised words ’paralysis’, ‘gnomon’ and ‘simony’ (page 1) is one such technique and immediately underscores the physical, spiritual and religious restrictions found within the story that Dubliners symbolises as a ‘paralysis’ (p1) of the city and its people.…
Joyce, James. Araby. 8th ed. of The Story and it. Boston, M.A.: Bedford/St. Martin, 1999. 430-434. Print…
Without his choice of diction, imagery would not be present in the story. Joyce uses imagery to describe Mangan’s sister and her flawless actions. “Her dress swung as she moved her body and the soft rope of her hair tossed from side to side” In reality all Mangan’s sister did was move, butt he narrator saw it as the most beautiful move in the world. Joyce’s choice of word shows imagery through Mangan’s sister and her perfect ways, as her hair “soft rope” tossed from side to side while it shimmered in the light. The Narrator sees her and is obsessed with every step she takes. The choice of diction illustrates imagery and shows the characterization of the…
Florence Walzl’s critical analysis of James Joyce’s The Dubliners sheds light on common themes in Irish society that is seen in Frank McCourt’s Angela’s Ashes. The critical analysis discusses the hardships the youth in Ireland must overcome only to grow older into a society that shames them for everything they do. This is the basis for Frank Mccourt’s memoir Angela’s Ashes which provides first hand examples of how the treatment of the Irish during childhood influences the path of their lives. When a child is raised in a society that is based on shame and disillusionment, they become trapped or irritated of everyone. After a child is raised in such a way that hinders their free will, they will grow to be passive or non-productive adults. Once…
Joyce also uses images from Christianity, especially when describing the boy's view of Mangan's sister. The boy sees the girl as a transmigration of the Virgin Mary, flawless and surrounded by light. And just like the Virgin Mary, Mangan's sister is worshiped by the narrator: "Her name…
Frustration another prevailing theme in some of Joyce’s work has also been outlined in Araby. Everyday the boy would suffer with an infatuation with a girl he could never have. He even had to deal with his frustration of his self-serving uncle, which he and his aunt were afraid of. The absolute epitome of frustration comes from his uncle when he arrived late at home delaying the one chance of going to Araby. When the boy arrives at Araby to find out that all of the shops are closed his true frustration was reveled on the inside.…
The transition between childhood and adulthood is a time in one’s life where new ideas, perspectives, and feelings emerge. James Joyce hones in on this period of life and coming of age in his short story “Araby” which follows a nameless narrator as he explores new experiences and feelings. Through imagery, diction, and syntax, Joyce develops the main character into a teenager who is ready for the next step in his life; he wants to leave his childhood in the past and embrace this newfound feeling of love that he is experiencing. Through imagery, Joyce develops the boy and the new feeling of love he is experiencing. The diction Joyce uses establishes a tone throughout the short story. The syntax Joyce includes reveals the boy’s true thoughts about the girl, thus developing his characterization farther. Joyce is able to capture the essence of the transition to adulthood with these three literary techniques.…
In the short story “Araby” by James Joyce, adoration appears not only in religion but also in a young boy’s romantic fantasy toward an older girl. The setting of the story being Ireland brings the assumption forth that the narrator practices Catholicism. This idea furthers itself when “the space of the sky above us was the color ever-changing violet and towards it the lamps of the street lifted their feeble lanterns.” The personification of the feeble lamps lifting their lanterns towards the sky presents an image of adoration. This adoration parallels and personifies that of followers of God.…
in the prose by James Joyce's "The Dead," he shows the congressional progression of Gabriel's character by the use of imagery and euphemism throughout the extent of the prose's excerpt.…
There are many obvious similarities between James Joyce’s, "Araby” and John Updike’s, "A&P.” “Araby" and “A&P" are both short stories in which the central characters are in love with women who don t even know it. Both short stories discuss the theme of boys entering maturity and manhood with which each young man leaves the last stage of his adolescence and steps into adulthood. Both of the narrators of John Updike’s “A&P” and James Joyce’s “Araby” are young boys who experience disillusionment in their ideals.…
James Joyce's Dubliners is a collection of short stories that offers a brief, but intimate window into the lives of a variety of characters, many of whom have nothing in common beyond the fact that they live in Dublin. Men and women of all ages, occupations and social classes are represented in this collection. The stories in Dubliners are often about the ways in which these individuals attempt to escape from the numbness and inertia that their lives yield, and the moments of painful self-realization that follow these attempts. "Araby", "The Dead" and "A Little Cloud", stories included in Dubliners best portray the idea of the endeavours one must go on to find themselves.…
In James Joyce’s short story Araby he is successful in creating an intense narrative. He does this in such a way that he enables the reader to feel what it is actually like to live in Dublin at the turn of the century when the Catholic Church had an enormous amount of authority over Dubliner’s. The reader is able to feel the narrators exhausting struggle to escape this influence of the Catholic Church by replacing it with a materialistic driven love for a girl.…