While the story” Fences” by August Wilson and” Oedipus the king “ by Sophocles I notice that there a lot of different and similarity in the story. There were several similarities, differences I saw like the tension between the characters, how the characters relate to one and other. To let you see how both story compare to each other. Fences are about a man name troy who is garbage collector was living in a time where there was so much discrimination and how he wanted something to be done about. He had a best friend name Bono who was a garbage collector and they were close.…
The story “A & P,” by John Updike is narrated by a young cashier Sammy at the A & P supermarket. The focus of the story is the girls in bathing suits that come into the supermarket to shop. The girls catch Sammy’s attention and his eyes follow them around the store. Sammy eventually rings the girls order up. As Sammy is checking the girls out the manager approaches the girls and warns them about wearing only bathing suits to the store.…
The two comparations that I have is one that is a book, “Making bombs for Hitler” by Marsha F Skrypuch. The book’s setting is during World War II. It is about a girl named Lida who is from the Ukraine who is separated from her sister and is taken by Nazis who put her into a concentration camp and is forced with other children to help them in hospitals, sewing uniforms and of course making the bombs. Her main goal is to get out and find her sister. The other comparation that I am making with this book is the the 2012 musical movie, “Les misérables”, directed by Tom Cooper.…
Throughout the story “A&P” each of the characters in the story evolved in some way by the end of the story. The main character and narrator, Sammy the 19-year-old cashier at the A&P has shown that he still has more maturing to do. He views other characters such as Stokesie and Lengel as enemies to him for invalid reasons. He sees any form of adult figure as a person who is an enemy. Stokesie, the 22-year-old that is already married and has two kids wants to be the eventual manager of the A&P. Sammy appears to be jealous of Stokesie because he somewhat has his life together and has dreams an ambitions to do something with his future.…
Heroic Epiphany The main characters in “A&P” by John Updike and “Araby” by James Joyce attempt heroic quests that lead to their respective epiphanies. These quests are significant to the hero because they want to do something good for other people. These epiphanies helped Sammy and the narrator gain experience and knowledge through their mistakes and foolishness. As a result, epiphany and the characters’ quests help signal a change in their personality and actions.…
James Joyce’s “Araby” and Rivka Galchen’s “Wild Berry Blue” are distinctly parallel due to Joyce’s and Galchen’s use of their respective protagonist’s folly and epiphany to depict the transformation from innocence to knowledge. In contrast, John Updike utilizes these same elements to illustrate society’s confining nature and the effects of nonconformity. The authors reveal the folly of their respective protagonist through the protagonists’ infatuation or obsession with a person that cannot reciprocate the same feelings.…
A Comparison of “Araby” and “A&P” In the short stories “Araby” and “A&P”, both Joyce and Updike deal with the familiar theme of loss of innocence in a coming of age in a similar vein with a few major disparities. To begin with, both works share a multitude of similarities, from the choice of narrator to the handling of the thematic conclusion. When viewed objectively, the plot points in both stories almost perfectly mirror each other; the exposition follows a young teenage boy, the conflict arises with the introduction of an attractive girl, the climax appears at the brash action of the infatuated protagonist, and the falling action shows the main character develop and regret his decision in a final epiphany scene.…
The Quests in “Araby” and “A Worn Path” In the two short stories “Araby,” by James Joyce, published in 1914, and “A Worn Path,” by Eudora Welty, published in 1973, both stories view life as a journey. Both protagonists, Phoenix Jackson, the main character in “A Worn Path,” and the Narrator in “Araby” embark on an errand out of love. In “Araby,” the Narrator develops an infatuation for Mangan’s sister, who for the longest period does not notice him. He laments, “I had never spoken to her, except for a few casual words, and yet her name was like a summons to all my foolish blood” (Joyce 200).…
A&P and Araby Both short stories, A&P and Araby, use first person narration to display the thoughts of the main characters. The use of first person allows the reader to see the world of the characters and follow their development. Most importantly the use of first person allows the audience to track the coming of age of the main characters through their own perspective and change in thoughts. Both stories take advantage of the first person. For example, in A&P, Sammy’s observations in the story deal with objectifying the women in the supermarket.…
In “A&P,” John Updike tells the story of a nineteen year old boy named Sammy who makes a dumb decision that he thinks is a wise choice. However, Sammy's knightly act of courage goes unseen by Queenie and her friends, and he has to learn to live with the repercussions of his actions. Updike's Story “A&P,” reveals Sammy as an immature boy who is a judgmental teen, a disrespectful employee, and is prejudiced toward women. First, Updike introduces Sammy as judgmental teen who has a sour attitude toward his shoppers.…
Although the events and circumstances of each short story are different, the theme of disappointment is prevalent within both. In “Araby” the young man within the story lusts after a girl only to realize his love isn’t returned. The theme of disappointment is clearly developed through the way in which he acts upon this discovery. His character explains,”I lingered before her stall, though I knew my stay was useless, to make interest in her wares seem more real. ”(Joyce 261).…
In Miss Brill by Katherine Mansfield and Araby by James Joyce we notice many common things in both main characters. One is their fantasy. In both stories both of the main characters are deluded by their imagination and have made their imagination shape their way of living. In Miss Brill, a middle-aged woman has a lonely life, she has barely any social interactions thus she finds distraction by eavesdropping into other people’s conversations.…
“Araby” and “the Rocking Horse Winner” are modernist short stories. “Araby” is a story that uses the first person narrator, written by James Joyce. It was published in 1914. The story is about a young boy’s first love in Ireland. The teenage love between a young boy who lives amongst blindness and darkness all along and a young girl, Mangan 's sister, is his neighbor.…
The narrator felt anger at himself for failing is mission and not returning with a present for his love. The similarities in John Updike’s “A&P”, and James Joyce’s “Araby” show the difference between reality and the fantasies of romance that play in their heads. Both characters learned that you can’t become an adult or make adult decisions by doing childish acts; they also learned not to make decisions or get upset because of how a young lady makes them…
James Joyce’s “Araby” and Alice Munro’s “Boys and Girls” are considered to be two of literatures greatest examples of coming of age stories. Both stories give insight on what life is like for a child growing up and transitioning into the life of a young adult. In Joyce’s “Araby” the main character is a young boy whose coming of age transformation was brought on by his infatuation with a close friend’s oldest sister. While in “Boys and Girls” our main character is a young girl trying her hardest not to be what the world expects her to be and in the end becomes what she never thought she would be, a woman. “Araby” and “Boys and Girls” show a young boy and girl’s journey through puberty.…