Musty
Loud quiet
The narrator of Araby is an unnamed young boy.
The narrator in the story "Araby" by James Joyce is an unnamed young boy who reflects on his experiences and emotions surrounding his infatuation with his friend Mangan's sister and his visit to the Araby bazaar. He provides insight into his thoughts and feelings as he navigates the complexities of desire and disappointment.
The conflict in "Araby" by James Joyce revolves around the narrator's unrequited love for Mangan's sister and his disillusionment with the bazaar. The conflict is not resolved as the story ends with the narrator feeling a sense of deep disappointment and loss.
The narrator in "Araby" by James Joyce is distracted by his infatuation with Mangan's sister. His feelings for her consume his thoughts and actions, leading to his inability to focus on anything else. This distraction drives the story forward as he navigates through his unrequited love and disillusionment.
Araby - short story - was created in 1914.
The narrator describes his street as quiet, with some houses displaying "brown imperturbable faces" and others having "gloomy gardens." He notes the emptiness and silence of the street, except for the noise of a plough that breaks the stillness.
The prompt for the story "Araby" by James Joyce revolves around a young boy who experiences his first infatuation with a girl and decides to attend a bazaar called Araby to buy her a gift, hoping it will impress her. The story explores themes of disillusionment and the loss of innocence as the boy's expectations are shattered upon reaching the bazaar.
The narrator of the story "The Man of the House" is an omniscient third-person narrator. This means that the narrator is not a character in the story, but rather an outside observer who knows and sees everything happening in the story.
In James Joyce's "Araby," the narrator finds comfort in images crafted by his own fantasy. His idealization of a busy, diverse, and exotic araby and his fixation with Mangan's sister are both shattered when he comes to terms with reality. The araby did not live up to his expectation and he is disillusioned by reality's failure to satisfy his previous outlook.
Quiet
In Araby, the narrator suddenly realizes his deep infatuation with Mangan's sister, his fervent love for her, his plans of bringing back a precious gift for her and winning her affection have all been illusions. At the very end of the story, as the fair closes down, he understands he has been blind to the reality of his situation. He will not win over Mangan's sister.There are other possible interpretations explaining the narrator's epiphany at the close of Araby. You can follow the link to a conversation about possible interpretations of the epiphany in Araby.