Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Title Significance
in Dulbiners
- Araby
- On the surface a real occasion
- Oriental fete being
held in the outskirts
of Dublin
- Deeper Meaning
- Romantic term for the Middle East
- No such country
- Popular throughout the 19th C to
express the romantic view of the East
- Story about romantic irony and a
romantic view of the world
- Connotes the exotic; the intriguing
excitement of an imaginary world
- Apocalyptic world of romance
- The boy sees his failure at the
bazaar as a sign for the failed
romance between him and the girl
- Suggests an escape
- The boys erotic desires for the girl become
joined to his fantasies about the Bazaar
- Unable to focus on school work due
to anticipation
- Land of romance & beauty away from
the mundane routine of city life
- The story is about orientation: derived from the
orient which comes from the East
- Originally meaning to
orient yourself - know in
which direction the sun
rises
- The boy in Araby is disorientated
- Young / Inexperienced
- Grace
- Religious
- Supernatural gift conferred by God on man so
that they might be able to attain salvation
- Friends coaxing Mr. Kernan to go to church
- Questionable Understanding of religion
- Almost comic
- Genuinely trying to help their friend
- None of the men actually
practice their faith
- Play on words
- Physical dexterity and elegance
- Ironic as the first time we meet Mr.
Kernan he has fallen down the stairs
lying in filth
- Lack of grace in the story
- Only a few 'graceful' moments in the story
- When the cyclist comes to help
wash the blood from Mr.
Kernan
- When Mr. Power offers to take Mr. Kernan home
- Playful - almost a joke from Joyce
- The Dead
- Paralysis / Inner-death
- Spiritual paralysis of those who escape their inner squalid
reality through daydreams, yet are limited in their imaginings
- Gabriel living life as
though he were dead
- Does not truly know his wife
- With death there is some
resurrection of spirit
- Gabriel feels it is now better to live life
"in the full glory of some passion"
- "Better pass boldly into that other world,
in the full glory of some passion, than
fade and wither dismally with age."
- Gabriel sees himself as a shadow of a
person, flickering in a world in which the
living and the dead meet
- Physically living but
emotionally dead
- Inability to change
- Who people appear to be
and who they truly are
- People at the party appear
lively, but inside these people
are dead - emotionally and in
their ability to change
- Gabriel is the exception as he
changes at the end of the story
- Symbol of Ireland
- Ireland
- Troubles that Ireland is facing
- Death of Irish identity
- Can be a ressurrection of spirit of
the Irish similar to that in the story
- Joyce's optimism for Ireland
- Relationship between those
dead and those alive
- Lines beginning to blur
- As are those between
imagination and reality
- "the solid world itself which these dead
had one time reared and lived in was
dissolving and dwindling."
- Dead affecting the living
- Must not linger on the past
but embrace the present
- Gabriel's speech