Monday, June 25, 2012

How are aspects of Modernism apparent in Araby by James Joyce?How does Araby typify the social and psychological realities of England between the...

Araby as a story seems to be a little too Romantic in
spirit to be a Modernist text. But with deeper examination what we realize its
deep-rooted critique of the Romantic notion of love. Jacques Lacan had defined love as
"giving something that you do not have to someone who does not even want it". The boy
wants to give a gift bought from Araby. The girl had never demanded it from him and he
does not even want it.


The radical conflation of the sacred
and the sexual is another Modernist element in the story. Mangan's Sister is both a
chalice and an object of beauty, arousing a moment of impregnatory orgasm  and that too
in the dead pries's back drawing room.


The story is
definitely concerned with loneliness in the city---a squalid and drab cityscape, typical
of Modernist literature e.g. Ulysses or Eliot's Waste
Land.


The proto-stream of consciousness style, the emphasis
on internal rather than external action, the epiphanic realization of a disillusionment
about the Romantic and Oriental fantasy of Araby.

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