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Araby

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Araby Why an impossible quest? Joyce was an Irish novelist and poet of the modernist avant-garde. He was born into a middle-class family in Dublin but later emigrated ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Araby


1
Araby
  • Why
  • an impossible quest?

2
Outline
  1. Your QA
  2. Social Background
  3. You Araby
  4. The Boys Language Image Symbol
  5. Group Discussion/Rehearsal
  6. Performance and Analysis

3
Q A (1)
  • Why is Mangan's sister not given a name in the sto
    ry? (a nobody easy for us to identify with)
  •  What do you think made the protagonist angry  in
    the end of the story? (Not getting what he
    wants, dream broken, realizing how vainglorious he
     was. ? story of initiation/disillusionment)
  • Why did the author use the word wires instead of
     strings" in this following sentence
    "But my body was like a harp and
    her words and gestures were like fingers running u
    pon the wires"?

4
QA
  • Wire vs. String
  • Harp strings may be made of nylon, gut (???),
    wire or silk. (Wikipedia)
  • The wire strung harp is often called the Irish
    or Scottish harp. It is an early musical
    instrument (source)

5
Q A (2)
  • Do you think whether the author purposely
    set the boy's family background as one different
    from most people's? (see Note below)
  • How does the woman at the stall influence the nar
    rator by merely asking him whether to buy anythin
    g out of a sense of duty?  And why did the author
     write down the detailed conversation?
  • How does religion influence the characters? A
    apple, chalice, the sisters not being able to go
    to Araby, etc.

6
Social Factors Religion, Alcoholism and
Family/Class Background
Comic Araby
7
Irish Society Catholicism, Politics and
Alcoholism
Comic Araby
8
James Joyce (18821941)
James Joyce The Dubliners
  1. 424 N. Richman st.
  2. 3100 Dublin as the center of paralysis 4
    aspects Childhood, Adolescence, Maturity and
    Public Life
  3. 3400 - Araby not all about paralysis and
    meanness

9
James Joyce (1882-1941) Personal Background
  • Born into a middle-class, Catholic family
  • Religious
  • Attended a Jesuit school and went on to study
    philosophy and languages at University College,
    Dublin.
  • Almost declared priesthood but then renounced it
    for the pursuit of his art.
  • Exiled Moved to Paris after graduation, and
    then, except for a short return to Dublin, stayed
    being an expatriate. (source)

10
Social Background the Story
  • Three Major Issues in Dublin in and after the
    Turn of the 20th Century
  • Poverty and the rise of Irish Nationalism
    (cultural, political and military? song of
    Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa in the market)
  • For Joyce, alcoholism (e.g. Joyces father, the
    boys uncle)
  • Irish Catholicism in decline (? the dead priest
    and the boys religious sentiment I'm afraid
    you may put off your bazaar for this night of Our
    Lord.)

Noises vs. Romantic Feelings
11
Signs of Poverty and Materialist Needs in the
Story
  • Spiritual Poverty
  • The boy without parents praying alone.
  • The priest dead
  • Material Poverty
  • The boys need of money
  • The visit of Mrs. Mercer, a pawnbroker's widow
    The uncle owes her some money?
  • A combination
  • --O, there's a . . . fib!
  • I allowed the two pennies to fall against the
    sixpence in my pocket.

Noises vs. Romantic Feelings
Feelings of being driven and derided by vanity
12
FYI Joyce Plan on The Dubliners
  • "My intention was to write a chapter of the moral
    history of my country and I chose Dublin for the
    scene because the city seemed to me the centre of
    paralysis. I have tried to present it to the
    indifferent public under four of its aspects
    childhood, adolescence, maturity, and public
    life. The stories are arranged in this order. I
    have written it for the most part in a style of
    scrupulous meanness and with the conviction that
    he is a very bold man who dares to alter in the
    presentment, still more to deform, whatever he
    has seen and heard. I cannot do any more than
    this. I cannot alter what I have written. "
    Letters, 2134 .

13
FYI Joyce on The Dubliners? the Universal
  • "For myself, I always write about Dublin, because
    if I can get to the heart of Dublin I can get to
    the heart of all the cities of the world. In the
    particular is contained the universal."

14
Questions for YOU!
  • Is the boy self-centered? Is the story fair to
    the girl? Can you relate to him in any way?
  • Pay attention to images of light, darkness and
    religion. Is the darkness described in the
    middle part of the story (e.g. in the priests
    room), the same with that at the end? Or does
    the boy feel the same about it?
  • The story of a quest Read it in its social
    context or as a universal story?
  • Describeand compare--the functions and
    implications of the dominant images in the
    stories we have read Boys and Girls, AP and
    Araby.

15
Have you had any experience similar to that of
Araby?
  • Puppy love and quest
  • Mixture of passion and religious sentiment (e.g.
    ecstasy)
  • First Shopping Experience
  • First Negative Encounter with Adults
  • If so, what makes your experience less
    frustrating than the boys?

16
"Araby" -- Performance
  • 1 childhood game and Mangans sister (par 1-6)
    setting N. Richmond St
  • 3 talking with Mangan's sister  (par 7-11)
  • 5 waiting alone for the action (par 12) Dublin
  • 7 the boy waiting for his uncle (par 13-22)
    -Home
  • 9 going to the Bazaar (par 23-24) train
    station street of Dublin
  • 11 at the Bazaar (25-end)
  •  

17
Araby -- Analysis
  • 2 Setting (1) Images that tell us about the
    social environment
  • 4 Roles of Religion vs. that of Materialism
    Depiction of Mangans sister and the boys
    feelings for her
  • 6 The boys changes The boy before and after
    he talks with Mangans sister (Araby)
  • 8 Setting (2)  Family (The boys uncle and
    aunt)
  • 10 Setting (3) Dublin
  • 12 Setting (4) the bazaar, (Araby)
  •  

18
Lets Take a Break!!!
  • Group Discussion
  • 1010 1030
  • Come back at 1040

19
Religion Society in Figurative Language
  • Image, Metaphor and Symbol

20
Language in Setting (1) images of enclosure,
darkness and decay dead religion
  • North Richmond Street blind, expressionless
    and imperturbable.
  • The priests room musty air, littered useless
    papers, The Abbot, by Walter Scott, The Devout
    Communicant, and The Memoirs of Vidocq.
  • I liked the last best because its leaves were
    yellow.
  • the backyard rusty bike-pump, wild garden with
    an apple tree

21
Language in Setting (2)light in darkness,
femininity
  • Mangans sister
  • Railroad and the street scenes
  • The bazaar

22
The Boys Love -- Mangans Sister
  • Images of light vs. browness (pars. 3, 10 vs. 4,
    15). Why?
  • She was waiting for us, her figure defined by the
    light from the half-opened door. . . . Her
    dress swung as she moved her body, and the soft
    rope of her hair tossed from side to side.
  • I kept her brown figure always in my eye
  • the brown-clad figure cast by my imagination

23
Characterization Narration, Dialogue Thought
Bubbles

24
Characters The Boy
  • par 5-6 ?3rd-person narration thought bubble.
    (confusing his religious sentiment with the
    romantic) (film chap 5-6)
  • par 10, 16 ? Dialogue between the boy and
    Mangans sister par 16, when he waits for his
    uncle. (film chap 7)
  • Par 25 ending Dialogue Narration Thought
    Bubbles
  • Note Thought Bubble

Too late . Dont forget your mission.
25
The Boy his puppy love
  • Stands by the railing when seeing or talking to
    her.
  • Possible Readings of Mangans sister
  • She is unaware of his adoration
  • She is limited by her environment which is a
    mixture of religious devoutness and materialism.

26
The boys emotions religious images
  • Par 5 In the market, he imagined that he bore
    his chalice safely through a throng of foes.
  • Speaks of her names in strange prayers and
    praises he does not understand, his eyes full of
    tears.
  • Par 6 At the priests room All his senses
    seemed to desire to veil themselves and, feeling
    that he was about to slip from them, he pressed
    the palms of my hands together until they
    trembled, murmuring O love! O love! many times.
    ? religious devotion and ecstasy?

You are my sunshine!
O Love! O love!
27
Final Question Creative Adaptation
  • Can this be a story set in Taiwan or where you
    are from?
  • How will the setting be changed?
  • (Setting commerce, religion and politics)

28
"A Rose for Emily" Emily on Trial --Did she
kill Homer Barren?
  • 2 Judge jury trial (see next slide)
  • 4 Prosecutor ref.
  • 6 Defendant, Emily (at age 80)
  • 8 Defendant's Lawyer ref.
  • 10 Witness (1) the first-generation town
    people (e.g. Colonel Sartoris)
  • 12 Witness (2) Town people of the 2nd
    generation (who went into her house twice)  

29
Trial Procedure Simplified
  • Opening statements. The prosecution and then the
    defense make opening statements to the judge or
    jury. These statements provide an outline of the
    case that each side expects to prove.
  • Prosecution case-in-chief. The prosecution
    presents its main case through direct examination
    of prosecution witnesses.
  • Cross-examination. The defense may cross-examine
    the prosecution witnesses.
  • Defense case-in-chief. The defense presents its
    main case through direct examination of defense
    witnesses.
  • Cross-examination. The prosecutor cross-examines
    the defense witnesses.
  • Jurys questions deliberation Ref. 1, 2
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