"Busy bazaar" Essays and Research Papers

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    Life Goes On

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    Life Goes On An important similarity between the reasons for the harassed and unhappy states of the protagonists at the end of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown” and James Joyce’s “Araby” is the mental and emotional consequence of each protagonist’s quest. In the two stories the main protagonists are very naïve‚ an unexplainable force drives him‚ from within‚ to pursue a mission during which he learns a harsh lesson about life. Unfortunately‚ his wisdom is limited to his knowledge and personal

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    Drug Addiction in Bangladesh

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    Drug addiction is not a recent problem in Bangladesh. But it has been rising. In recent years Drug Addiction has significantly increased in Bangladesh. This agent of human devastation has spread its tentacles worldwide and also in our country. Every intelligent and humane person in the world society and international organizations such as the UN and WHO are alarmed by the present rate of addiction. Nowadays nearly ten per cent of outpatients in our hospitals are cases of drug addiction involving

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    Araby(Loss of Innocence)

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    watched every day and shyly followed from a distance while he walked to school is actually showing him some attention .Unfortunately for the boy the attention is mistaken for something more than it is. As the boy waits for the day he can go to the bazaar ‚ he thinks of nothing exceptMangan’s sister. The boy sees her when he is going to sleep ‚ when he wakes ‚ and in school in his papers. The boy wants nothing more than to see Mangan’s sister again ‚ but ‚in his mind for him to do that he needs to

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    Innocence In Araby

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    A child’s innocence is extremely important as it is the essential path which is paved for their expanding thoughts and imagination. Over time as children face new challenges through their upbringing‚ they begin to lose their supreme innocence by making naïve decisions to overcome these problems. As all unexperienced children alike‚ the protagonists in “Araby” and “The Garden Party” by James Joyce and Katherine Manisfield respectively‚ both Laura and the narrator in “Araby” undergo crisis where they

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    Meena Bazar

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    Meena Bazar is one of the largest retail supermarket chain in Bangladesh with International standards‚ opened in 2002 and operates in Dhaka‚ Chittagong and Khulna division. Meena Bazar outlets are carrying almost 12‚000-15‚000 products for sale & providing convenient shopping experience‚ easy parking and friendly customer service for its customers.  Meena Bazar is a subsidiary of Gemcon Food & Agricultural Products Ltd‚ producing organic products‚ dairy items‚ prepared food & herbal products

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    he’s still a boy he has unrealistic expectations to love‚ adult life and girls. The boy wants to go to the bazaar Araby‚ since the girl can’t go herself. When he comes there almost all the stalls are closed. He’s looking at one of the still open stalls when a girl comes over. Even though he’s a potential customer‚ she wants to go back to her friends. The boy buys nothing and leaves the bazaar

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    Araby - 1

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    on her. “I kept her brown figure always in my eye and‚ when we came near the point at which our ways diverged‚ I quickened my pace and passed her.” (504). She is the light in his fantasy‚ someone who will lift him out of darkness. The boy sees the bazaar at Araby as an opportunity to win her over‚ as a way to light the candle in her eyes. However‚ the boy is more awkward then shy‚ his

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    Disabled vs. an Unknown Girl

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    A Comparative Essay between “Disabled” and “An Unknown Girl” Moniza Alvi reflects on India as her hand is hennaed by “an unknown girl” “in the evening bazaar”. The predominantly upbeat mood of this poem contrasts with the pessimistic mood in “Disabled” written by Wilfred Owen‚ a soldier in the First World War‚ stating his anti-war view through a poem on the life of a young soldier “sewn short at elbow”‚ crippled by war. In his poem‚ the difference between past and present allows Owen to reveal

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    The innocence of a child slowly deteriorates as they develop into an adult. The narrator in the short story Araby loses his innocence on his voyage to a bazaar (Araby) in hopes to impress a girl. In Araby‚ James Joyce develops the narrator through the trip to Araby where the young boy is exposed to the realities of adulthood. The narrator in Araby is an older man reminiscing back to his childhood. He recollects playing in the streets with his friend Mangan and more specifically seeing Mangan’s

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    From a quick read through James Joyce’s “Araby‚” one may think that it is a simple story about a boy and his first infatuation with a female. Upon a closer inspection‚ the religious symbolism becomes clearer as Joyce uses symbols throughout the story to reflect upon his own experiences and his own view of the Irish Church. As told in the text’s prologue‚ Joyce saw Ireland to be in a sort of spiritual paralysis during his early years‚ and an argument could be made that “Araby” was his way of expressing

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