"James Joyce" Essays and Research Papers

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    To what extents would you go to capture the attention of your crush‚ someone you are so infatuated with? In the short story Araby by James Joyce it describes a young boy so stunned by his neighbor he does all sorts of things to see and speak to her. He proves how infatuated he is with her throughout the short story by; doing small things to ensure he can see her‚ the tone he uses to describe her and how she makes him feel and making a promise to her as a way to potentially lead to more interaction

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    James Joyce used blindness as a very clever symbol in the setting of his story‚ “Araby”. He starts off the story describing the location of Araby Street with this line‚ “North Richmond Street‚ being blind‚ was a quiet street except at the hour when Christian Brothers’ School set the boys free” (Joyce‚ 839). Throughout the story‚ blindness is seen in numerous aspects of the story‚ shown in unique ways to display the hidden meaning of the setting. In describing “Araby” Street as being blind and quiet

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    is considered to be James Joyce. His modernist novel Dubliners offers a tremendous possibility of pinpointing the elements of modernism through analysing its basic themes‚ narrative devices‚ structure‚ imagery and language. Joyce chose to name this collection of short stories Dubliners as its scene is set in Dublin. The title leads the reader to presume that it is a book about life and that it describes it as it is; but this novel regards life from one aspect only. James Joyce often presents the protagonists’

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    Eveline

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    Opportunity That Was Let Go “Eveline” is a short story out of the collection called the “Dubliners”‚ wrote by James Joyce. Joyce has written fifteen stories within “Dubliners”‚ all in which seem to follow the same pattern. Each story has it ’s own plot image. There tends to be four stages‚ that the plot goes through during each story; childhood‚ adolescence‚ mature life and public life. Joyce uses these stages as a symbolic representation. In this story of “Eveline‚” a teenager is faced with two choices

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    Araby Literary Critique

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    Araby‚ by James Joyce‚ is a story about an unnamed narrator who becomes infatuated with his friend‚ Mangan’s‚ sister‚ but does not have the courage‚ nor the will power to pursue his affections. After observing her in the gloomy streets of Dublin for some time‚ an opportunity finally presents itself as Mangan’s sister initiates conversation with the narrator‚ altering the narrator’s otherwise repetitive and simple life. “I had never spoken to her‚ except for a few casual words‚ and yet her name was

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    Eveline vs Loius Mallard

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    Liberation and freedom are exquisite possessions. The possible attainment or loss of it can both cause equal amount of anxiety as revealed by lead characters in the two short stories we shall now discuss. Eveline in James Joyce’s short story Eveline and Mrs. Mallard in Kate Chopin’s ‘The story of an Hour’ are standing at the threshold of a new life. The difference between the two is that while Mrs. Mallard is eagerly looking forward to the new life‚ Eveline is deeply scared of the unknown. When you

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    The works of Irish writer James Joyce are distinguished by their keen psychological insight and use of various literary techniques; most notably "stream of consciousness" which is an attempt to write in the manner in which thoughts and memory actually work in our minds. This study is an attempt to examine the ’ steam of consciousness ’ as a technique used in Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) which is one of the greatest of modern novels. Joyce arranged his novel in five

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    tephen Dadalus; James Joyce’s Version Of Shakespeare’s Hamlet In the Victorian Era Those who were close with James Joyce say that he was determined to become a better writer than the beloved William Shakespeare. James Joyce considered his work Ulysses to be seen as a literary reference to a variety of styles‚ points of view‚ and is in fact full of reference to literature and Victorian culture. Although this classic harmonizes with Homer’s The Odyssey‚ there is more allusion to Hamlet’s character

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    some sort of self-realization. Such moments may result in a loss of innocence‚ the destruction of hopes and dreams‚ the sense of imprisonment‚ and perhaps lessons learned. Two literary works that illustrate such concepts are Amy Tan’s “Two Kinds” and James Joyce’s “Araby.” Both pieces are narrated by the main characters‚ as adults‚ reflecting upon and portraying a better understanding of their childhood experiences. Although the affairs and outcomes recounted in each differ greatly‚ “Two Kinds” and “Araby”

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    ‘possibility’ will be analysed in the context of the characters of the texts and in the ‘possibility’ for their personal growth and opportunity for change‚ be it spiritual‚ physical or emotional. The essay will focus thematically on four chosen texts: James Joyce’s The Sisters and Langston Hughes’ poems I‚ too‚ New Yorkers and Harlem. Firstly this essay will analyse how the city of Dublin represented in The Sisters is shown‚ through Joyce’s literary devices‚ to both offer and restrict possibility for

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