These stories; Araby written by James Joyce and A&P written by John Updike, draw attention to a number of the common problems which youths face when approaching adulthood. These two stories are of young men that are pictured to be hit with the unsettling understanding of the fantasies and the brutal reality of romance. They talk about a man who is currently in the development phase due to romance and love. Along the way, these men suffer emotional problems. A major similarity existing between both stories is the major characters are impractical and they both have weird expectations from women. This caused them to show women lots of affection which is not fully reciprocated and this causes them to be heartbroken and sad. They don’t enjoy any rewards from the love and affection they give to women but instead they face rejection severally and sometimes, they are unable to handle it. The major cause of pain suffered by a male reaching adulthood is love and affection for a totally unreachable girl who unintentionally gets the young man into an intense emotional and sexual frenzy that he starts to mistake "sexual impulses for those of honor and chivalry” (Saldivar 215). This issue of self-deception is what both stories focus on. The young and developing man is traumatized emotionally as he has to "compensate for the emptiness and longing in the young boy's life" (Saldivar 210). Even though Joyce’s original work is markedly different from Updike’s rendition, both pieces are also closely...
Just like the Updike Story, James Joyce’s Araby highlights the suffering faced by humans due to love. In Araby, the narrator falls in love with Mangan’s (his friend) sister. He is an adolescent and thus his feelings of affection are painful, confusing and bedeviling.Work Cited
Gale, Cengage Learning. A Study Guide for Updike's A & P. Gale, Cengage Learning, 2015.
Joyce, James, et al. Araby. Triestina Carlo Moscheni, 1935.
Joyce, James. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: And, Dubliners. Barnes & Noble Classics, 2004.
Saldivar, Toni. "The art of John Updike's" A&P"." Studies in Short Fiction 34.2 (1997): 215.
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