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Araby And A& 38;P Research Paper

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John Updike's "A&P" and James Joyce's "Araby" are very alike. The theme of the two stories centers on a young men who are concerned over thinking out the dissimilarity between reality and the imaginations of romance that dance in their heads. They also examine their mistaken thoughts on their respective world, the girls they encounter, and most importantly, themselves. One of the main comparable aspects of the two stories is the built up of the main characters' idealistic expectations of women. Both characters set their sights on one girl which they place all their fondness in. Both Sammy and the boy were rebuffed in the end. Both stories do a good job of immersing the reader into unstable minds of young men faced with difficult life lessons. In their instance being, life is not what one expects. Continuing the comparison in both "Araby" and "A&P," the stories are written in first person narrative. The difference...

In each instance however, the men in the stories endeavor to rise up and astonish the young ladies by proposing something they recognize to be of value to the women. How they do this is varied but still very similar. Sammy preserves the integrity of the young women in connection to their bathing suit apparel; in "Araby," a charm is guaranteed or pledged. Both young men do not succeed in their missions.
As for the revelations, Samy jumped to the liberation of the young women by abandoning his job under some misinterpretation that by protecting their "honor," he would have bestowed upon him that which he "liberated." The reality is that was never, no matter what he did, have an opportunity to be with these…

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