Araby by James Joyce - Short Story Summary, Analysis, Review from Dubliners

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2024
  • I think we all want the ending explained. We explore some of the usages of Light and Dark as well as Religious References in this piece. This is just an interpretation and discussion we offer. We know there are plenty of other opportunities to interpret. We've seen great ones in regards to the modernity and Celtic revival. Let us know your favorite in the comments below.
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    TABLE OF CONTENTS:
    0:00 Introduction
    0:31 Background and Publication Info
    3:51 Plot Summary
    6:21 Analysis
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Komentáře • 115

  • @TheCodeXCantina
    @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety

    Dubliners Playlist: czcams.com/video/IHPENyJSot0/video.html
    Support Us: www.patreon.com/thecodexcantina
    BOOKMARKS:
    Background and Publication Info: @0:31
    Plot: @3:51
    Analysis: @6:21

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety

      Thanks for watching! Let us know your favorite interpretation in the comments.

  • @danieDPortgas7187
    @danieDPortgas7187 Před 3 lety +27

    Something I also noticed about the "central apple tree" is that it could be an allusion to the Garden of Eden because the tree of knowledge of good and evil was at the center of the garden. I feel like it is another important signal telling the readers more about the narrator's loss of innocence.

  • @StriketheSunMD
    @StriketheSunMD Před 4 lety +8

    This is a great format and discusses a great story!

  • @ItsPsy_
    @ItsPsy_ Před 3 lety +4

    Thanks for this, it really helped me understand the story even more! Keep it up!

  • @BookishTexan
    @BookishTexan Před 4 lety +5

    Ah! One of my favorite stories of all time. Like you guys I identified so much with the main character and his longing for Mangan's sister. I have a tendency to read it as more simple and straight forward, but loved hearing your analysis.

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety +2

      Bookish No wrong way to enjoy it. I probably take a first pass for fun at a text and then take a round two to understand more details on a personal level.

    • @BookishTexan
      @BookishTexan Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheCodeXCantina Along those lines.
      I took the single apple tree in the garden to be a Biblical reference to the Garden of Eden with the narrator as Adam and Mangan's sister as Eve tempting him out of his boyhood. He winds up frustrated at the end when he realizes that he has been tempted out of that boyhood innocence only to find himself impotent to complete the transaction because he become self conscious when confronted by the more assured flirtation between the woman who works the stall at Araby and her other male customers. He thought he was a smooth operator with the ladies only to be confronted with the reality of how little he actually knew and how awkward he actually was. Which is a not uncommon experience for young men and their first loves.
      Also, I thought your idea that Mangan's sister was going into a monastery was interesting. I have always thought that she attended a monastery school-- common for catholic girls of her social class I believe whether they were going to become nuns or not -- that was simply going on a retreat for the week in which Araby would be open. The idea that she was going to become a nun never occurred to me.
      Great discussion video.

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety +1

      Bookish Sure, I can absolutely see that. I just replied to Deenie to about how I forgot to go into the boy being “blind” to her situation. I can definitely see this interpretation of yours and bring in “blind faith” into the discussion there. I always thought how Joyce pulled away from religion had a nice spin on his usage of religious symbols and made me think about what his commentary would be about his own pull away from religion as opposed to being in those confines. I can definitely see your angle too though as you know my love of discussing religions and how his views are shaped by the very thing he grew up with! Always a pleasure to hear your thoughts 😎

    • @BookishTexan
      @BookishTexan Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheCodeXCantina This is my favorite thing about booktube and what makes your channel such a pleasure to follow.

  • @sameenashameer5878
    @sameenashameer5878 Před 3 lety +3

    Loved the discussion!❤

  • @martinb6065
    @martinb6065 Před 3 lety

    i just read the short story and omg. thank you so much.

  • @kjerstenlynum1686
    @kjerstenlynum1686 Před 4 lety +3

    You guys are crazy entertaining and engaging

  • @agustindelgado1771
    @agustindelgado1771 Před 4 lety +1

    great video guys, keep it like this!

  • @daryared2808
    @daryared2808 Před 3 lety

    Just got this video recommended by my friend!! Love it°°

  • @parvintelli5178
    @parvintelli5178 Před 3 lety

    Thanks, it was great. Enjoyed it.❤️

  • @avizjordan7834
    @avizjordan7834 Před 4 lety +7

    11:04 I didn't pick up on that.. neither did my teacher🤦 y'all are geniuses

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks, and there's lots of ways to take interpretations. Your teacher may be taking it the nationalistic or auto-fic route and view this as her boarding school as the secular National System of Education which James Joyce constantly lit up. I'd like to do another video on Araby some time with other interpretations from Dubliners stories as there was a lot of contention with that.

  • @kjerstenlynum1686
    @kjerstenlynum1686 Před 4 lety

    LOVE THIS oh my goodness

  • @disiminibeddegama8775
    @disiminibeddegama8775 Před 3 lety

    Glad to watch this master piece...it was very beneficial for my studies @university...thank you for this great work & looking forward for more great works...🔥🤟❤

  • @vicjames3256
    @vicjames3256 Před 4 měsíci

    Revisiting this 20 years later, and reminded of the light vs dark motif, I'm realizing how much Damien by Hesse uses it (maybe hammers it to the ground).
    I wonder if the story influenced the novel. You've got Dubliners coming out in 1914 and Damien being released in 1919. Or perhaps every artist was contemplating their place amid a deeply religious society at that time... The world may never know.

  • @Nabilo8501
    @Nabilo8501 Před 3 lety

    amazing review

  • @PintsAndPaperbacks
    @PintsAndPaperbacks Před 4 lety +4

    I’ve avoided Dubliners because I’ve heard it’s hella difficult to read. But this story sounded very interesting. You guys have inspired me to do a video on one of my favorite short stories now Where are you Going, Where have you Been? Have either of you read it? I think it’s pretty common to read in school. Or at least it was when I was in high school lol

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety +1

      I haven't read that particular story by her, but have heard of it. For sure, Dubliners is VERY approachable. It's available for free in kindle/audiobook right now for prime members and is in the public domain so it's pretty accessible right now.

    • @cavandavidson1185
      @cavandavidson1185 Před 9 měsíci

      Dubliners is straight forward and lovely. Ulysses and finnegans wake are basically nonsense.

  • @patrickpilkington6241
    @patrickpilkington6241 Před 4 lety +3

    Well done gentlemen. I also want to mention that Joyce in “The Dubliners” all throughout, uses color and light with dual or even multiple usages. Mainly, he often uses white and light to symbolize purity and epiphany as you aptly summarized but, as we see with examples like the snowfall in “The Dead” as well as lilies/Lily in other stories, and a relative myriad of subtle points, in these instances, white, light, snow, flowers, are representative of death and peaceful rest in death. Joyce does an immensely bold thing with his writing and in his time whereby he’s practically screaming at polite Irish society, that for all its tremendous energy and gathered wisdom via her suffering, Eire always finds a way to not just live but, to mire longingly in the ever running wake that lionizes her suffering, capitulation, and death. “Ivy Day in the Committee Room” does well in this scrutiny and harsh critique of Irish Nationalism and Irish Sovereignty ... ultimately Her identity. Parnell was a Protestant but, an outspoken nationalist who was murdered for his patriotism. Sadly, because no other Protestant nationalist of his stature could speak and advocate for all of a free and independent Ireland or the Home Rule which was the eventual stepping stone toward the independent republic ceded the six counties of the northeast/Ulster to be kept under the Crown and where a minority unionist aka loyalist faction keeps a Catholic minority in an Apartheid-esque subdued and oppressed with a tacit endorsement from Parliament, the PM and the Queen. A paralyzed people preserved in Joyce’s time. When you peer into the stories of the average unemployed Catholic in Belfast and you hear what their lives entail, you can easily think you’re speaking with a Joyce created character. It’s quite interesting. Even in the Republic to the south and west, despite gaining an identity and evolving as they surely have, progress has been grindingly slow since Michael Collins led his countrymen to the aforementioned home rule which bridges the nation into the establishment of their own separate Irish national identity and to the point of wallowing and the hinderance of growth forsaken by the comforts of nostalgia, Ireland would live in crippling poverty and ever more staunch in her adherence to the Roman Catholic Faith which only served to entrench parties on both sides where her six separate counties under British occupation or sovereignty depending on where your convictions fall, maintain a flimsy peace by way of partition walls and curfews amongst religious and ethnic discrimination and brutality.
    A liberating figure seemed to be what Joyce always was seeking. Even within his pen name and the character name in another of Joyce’s classic works, Stephen Dedalus pays homage to the Greek literature character and father to Iccarus the tragic figure. Dedalus was imprisoned and escaped by fashioning a set of wings that were made with wax. He cautioned his younger and hubristic son Iccarus not to fly to close to the sun for the wax would surely melt and he would plummet into the sea below.
    Joyce was a libertarian but, not one who was foolish about the pursuits and ultimate freedoms of one were to obtain a real and true freedom. Ultimately, freedom itself forces disciplines to be applied lest they be neglected and, base emotions like euphoria set the flimsy order of that potential philosophy about into an implosion and, the victims who witness it to demand rigid authoritarianism to protect and preserve a society as they see fit and so on and so on.
    I went off on a bit of a rant here but, you’ve inspired me as has Joyce. My punctuation also slid heavily in the back half of this post but, these things happen whence one gets on a roll. I just really enjoy great writing and I absolutely love unpacking it. Joyce is amongst the absolute best authors for those of us who like to go and dig. Joyce Archeology ought to be a real thing in literary academia.
    I love the channel. Brilliant work and I’m looking forward to diving into many of the titles and topics I’m seeing in your archives here.

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety

      Thanks! Gushing is always welcome over Joyce here. I agree. Going through "Ivy Day..." would be hard without bringing in some of the Parnell/Home Rule issues of the day and other auto-fic elements. It sounds like you must be familiar with Richard Ellmann's seminal biography of Joyce? I found it to be a wonderful read and resource when working through some of his writings. Happy to meet a fellow Joyce fan.

  • @emilycardona3544
    @emilycardona3544 Před 3 lety +4

    thank you for helping me study for a quiz i have on this story tomorrow!!!

  • @FreyaVal
    @FreyaVal Před rokem +1

    The girl already studied at a convent. But she couldn’t go to Araby because she had to go to a retreat! I hope you know what we do at retreat and why go to retreat

  • @helenhuang6858
    @helenhuang6858 Před 4 lety

    Thanks!

  • @abdulraisthamrin2574
    @abdulraisthamrin2574 Před 4 měsíci

    I am a fans of Araby, as an English Teachers from my perspective the ending explained that No matter how hard he tried to get the girl, at the end of the day HE cant be with her. Whether He can give what the girl wants from the Bazzar or not there's no way he can be with her because SHE is a convent, nun or sister. In Catholic church Those who decided to be a Sister can't marry with anybody. That's how I interpret the story. I might be wrong but that's make a story more interesting

  • @pepupyourstep
    @pepupyourstep Před měsícem

    I think at the time, "convent" may have been referring to the convent school girls would go to. Remember that boys and girls would have been separated under the Catholic education system. Mengan's sister is also wearing the brown uniform that you would associate with convent schools.

  • @chriss3202
    @chriss3202 Před 3 lety +15

    Honestly great analysis overall, but just one thing: When the girl talks about her convent, she's more than likely referring to her convent school, which in Ireland were/are all-girls secondary schools owned by a convent where they're taught by nuns. They are still pretty much the standard for girls in most parts of the country because most schools were (and in large part continue to be) owned and/or operated by religious orders. I don't think it really signifies any particular religious devotion on her part that makes her an inaccessible object of desire, since in all likelihood this kind of retreat was mandatory.

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks

    • @superintelligentapefromthe121
      @superintelligentapefromthe121 Před 2 lety +1

      Historical context is priceless.

    • @jamesstout6280
      @jamesstout6280 Před 2 lety +5

      ​@@superintelligentapefromthe121 Ah you must be new to literature. You are correct that it's a mistake in historical contextual analysis, but it's actually wrong to pretend you have to use historical context. There's this thing called "the death of the author" and formalism. You'll learn it's just a different way at looking at literature.

  • @mrcross3178
    @mrcross3178 Před rokem +2

    I didn't enjoy the story at all, but your video was great and gave me a big doze of comprehension.

  • @patrickobiri2106
    @patrickobiri2106 Před 4 lety

    Can someone help with this question if possible, (Provide two significant similarities and two significant differences between the protagonist of “Crush” and the protagonist of “Araby.” ) I will appreciate.

  • @milaahmad7210
    @milaahmad7210 Před 4 lety

    Discuss the dark and light images in James Joyce's Araby, and then show their importance to the theme of innocence and experience.

  • @jowgiezamora3739
    @jowgiezamora3739 Před 3 lety +3

    19:12 the boy was just simping, overall I enjoyed the story🙌

  • @StephenBrock-iw5bf
    @StephenBrock-iw5bf Před rokem

    I teach AP Lit and my students this week have to compare "The Dead" to another short story in Dubliners. I've been enjoying the analysis on your site as I connect back to these texts I read for the first time 30 years ago.
    Here in "Araby,"I was musing about the death of the priest in paragraph two, specifically about a connection to "Sisters." Your thoughts?

  • @Idazle
    @Idazle Před rokem +3

    I wonder what Joyce would think of our wild speculations and symbolic interpretations of his stories? 🙂

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před rokem +2

      Annoyed. Slightly disappointed. A slice of entertainment 😂

  • @deanie3824
    @deanie3824 Před 4 lety

    Reading it was like being transported back to middle school. Such an awkward time! I hope Krypto saved some of those love letters so then he can do a dramatic reading of them. 🤣
    When I got to the convent part, I was like, ohhh poor kid is too in over his head.

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety

      Nice job! I missed pointing out kid was "blind" to it like the way his street was described as "blind" and how he drew the "blinds" when looking out his window at her.

  • @supershmueli
    @supershmueli Před 4 lety

    Writing a paper on this right now

  • @CB-vg1wq
    @CB-vg1wq Před rokem

    Really enjoyed your analysis. I thought the apple tree in the center of the garden and scraggy bushes represent the Garden of Eden. I have a couple of interpretations, the 'Garden of Eden ' i.e. the relationship with the young woman is not available to him. A darker interpretation has to do with the criticism Joyce had for the Catholic Church. The Garden of Eden - the relationship- is destroyed by the Catholic Church taking the woman away with her vocation to the Church. Do other people see the apple tree and scraggy bushes as symbolism for the Garden of Eden?

  • @marysolperez7618
    @marysolperez7618 Před 3 lety

    who allowed you guys to pop off like that? I love this video smm!! and krypto is lowkey hella cute

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 3 lety

      Thank you for the kind words. Lol, I would let him know but it would just go to his head.
      -Una

    • @dave0729
      @dave0729 Před 3 lety

      Pp

  • @cavandavidson1185
    @cavandavidson1185 Před 9 měsíci

    Probably good to start with dubliners, many of which are beautiful. I'd stop there if i were you, finnegans wake is complete gibberish.

  • @StephenGutknecht
    @StephenGutknecht Před 2 lety

    Dante never talked to Beatrice, and he went to the most extreme in love without relationship.

  • @mehmediburahim1341
    @mehmediburahim1341 Před 3 lety +1

    NEWCLG Pullingo like here..😁👍🏼

  • @chrisheatleymulhall3950
    @chrisheatleymulhall3950 Před 2 lety +1

    The reference to retreat is not about entering the nunnery, it's a contemporary social requirement for young women, it restricted their social interactions

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 2 lety

      Thanks, this was already commented a few times and I'm sure is great info when you don't take a formalist approach.

  • @spellboundtarot1264
    @spellboundtarot1264 Před 3 lety

    Please analyze The Ulysses as well .. 🤒😬

  • @alymillane8514
    @alymillane8514 Před rokem

    i love u

  • @TheStephanieRichards
    @TheStephanieRichards Před 2 lety

    Nice! Thanks for the video. One little thing, symbology is the study of symbols. You want to use the word symbolism instead. Will watch more 😊

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 2 lety

      Thanks and yeah, we’ve corrected since. Video is a bit old. Cheers

  • @coopercallender400
    @coopercallender400 Před 4 lety +1

    it aint Christmas no mo

  • @Idazle
    @Idazle Před rokem

    Araby does better than Goethe's Werther? 😮😮😳😳

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před rokem

      Have you read part 2? Oof 😂

    • @Idazle
      @Idazle Před rokem

      @@TheCodeXCantina Book 2 of Werther? I certainly have. Why?

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před rokem

      @@Idazle oh sorry, I’m getting my son ready for something at same time as responding. For some reason I thought I had read “Faust” 😂

    • @Idazle
      @Idazle Před rokem

      @@TheCodeXCantina no problem! you know what, in spite of the veneration drawn by Faust, if I had to take just one Goethe's book to the desert island that one would be The Sorrows of Young Werther (and if I had to take a book on Faust that would be Marlowe's Faust and not Goethe's 🙂). Good night! 🛏🛏🌜🌜

  • @markthompson6552
    @markthompson6552 Před 2 lety

    In Ireland going to a convent doesn’t necessarily mean you’re going on to be a nun, for example my sister is going to a convent and isn’t even religious. Nearly every all-girl school is a convent.

  • @SidharthR
    @SidharthR Před 3 lety

    I think there's a meta play at work here. The reader obsessing over the meaning and symbols in the story finally realizes (early morning, half sleeping) that he/she is not going to get to the truth of the story by doing that. The symbols are as distracting/misleading as the exotic Araby. Joyce has said about Ulysses that he has put in enough stuff for the critics to go on about for ever. It's possible he has started early on!

  • @donkeedic366
    @donkeedic366 Před 3 lety

    this fella looks like aaron rodgers lol

  • @lesterstone8595
    @lesterstone8595 Před rokem

    I think you're wrong about the convent. Just like the boy went to an all-boys Christian Brothers School run by male members of a religious order, the girl is going to an all-girls school run by nuns who belong to a convent.

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před rokem

      Yep. There are a lot of cultures that work that way including Ireland. It’s a completely fair challenge to a historical context. We took a formalist approach.

    • @lesterstone8595
      @lesterstone8595 Před rokem

      @@TheCodeXCantina 😜

  • @flatrounds
    @flatrounds Před 4 lety

    Respectfully, I would offer a different interpretation. The goal itself (“vanity”) was always wrong, not just the goalposts. Hence, the narrator’s “anguish and anger” at having been “driven and derided by” his own delusions of grandeur at story’s end.

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 4 lety +1

      j g You’re welcome to offer any interpretation you’d like. As long as one can back up a view, it’s certainly fair game for discussion.

    • @flatrounds
      @flatrounds Před 4 lety +3

      The CodeX Cantina To me the story has always been about “vanity.” The girl and Araby are just metaphors...they are not the thing itself.
      I suppose a deeper level it’s about the narrator’s narcissistic worldview which is very well presented in metaphors which describe isolation, longing for ordinary human connection, and a preoccupation with unattainable purity and moral goodness.
      Being unable to find simple happiness and connection in everyday life, the narrator seeks out the shiny and superficial excitement of Araby with which to fill his inner void. In the end, he is disillusioned by the naïveté of his pursuit and is left feeling even more isolated and empty than where he started.

    • @aparna4514
      @aparna4514 Před 4 lety +1

      @@flatrounds wowwww❤️your interpretation is thought provoking!

    • @flatrounds
      @flatrounds Před 4 lety

      Aparna S Nair thanks !

  • @jaqmart
    @jaqmart Před rokem

    An OK analysis but the attempt at Irish accent is truly pitiful and painful to hear - someone in Scotland might sound somewhat like that, maybe when getting out of bed after a heavy night, but absolutely no one born in Ireland would ever burr their words in that manner. Get real guys

  • @anridvalishvili5908
    @anridvalishvili5908 Před 10 měsíci

    I don't know why but I got different point. I think the epiphany urges kid to do something to accomplish his thing, not to give up on it

  • @BasedEnjoyer
    @BasedEnjoyer Před 26 dny

    I've never understood her going to the "Convent" as going to become a nun My mother went to a convent , thats what they called girls schools when the girls where taught by nuns (I think) , like I went to a christian brother's school but never became a "brother" but , you may be right , I don't know . One of the best stories and fills me with dread when I think about my son , soon to become a teenager , we've all been there .

    • @TheCodeXCantina
      @TheCodeXCantina  Před 26 dny +1

      It’s not historically accurate as you put to interpret it our way in this video. You’re correct it could be more of a school and this approach is a very formalistic approach

    • @BasedEnjoyer
      @BasedEnjoyer Před 26 dny

      @@TheCodeXCantina the convents had a reputation for being extremely strict as did the Christian brothers schools although I found the constant cat and mouse battles with the brothers in one I went to in Liverpool highly entertaining many didn’t and I think some are suing them for physical abuse . It all depends how you look on things . I’d prefer the whack round the earhole and the leather strap I got than some woke soyjack trying to be my best friend .