In my essay I
want to talk about the influences that men and women have on each other in
“A&P” and “Araby”, and how the girls seem apathetic and the men seem to
have very strong feelings. I also want to talk about how both of the main male
characters in the stories have dull, uninteresting, or overall unappealing
lives that they use the girls to escape from, or at least the idea of them. I wanted to possibly focus
on the idea that in “A&P” Queenie and her followers were described as going
against the normal flow of traffic in the aisles of the store and how the other
people in the store were depicted as “sheep” in comparison. I also wanted to
focus on the part in “Araby” when the main character in the story was described
as “carrying his chalice through a throng of foes”. These show how Mangan’s
sister and Queenie are symbols of the men’s desire for excitement and hope. I
think that these two passages relate to one another in that they both put the
women of the stories in positions of power, and it’s the power that the men
wish that they had.
OK, I think this is a specific focus on how these stories are about "abstract" women--women as symbols, ideas, entities that function to represent ideas of power to disenfranchised men. Charting the unique ways that the man construct the women as symbols--social nonconformity, etc.--should make up the body paragraphs.
ReplyDeleteI follow the Queenie part more so than Mangan's sister--what power does she represent? transcendence?