The corpses of Arabic's Hemingway and Joyce Indian camp are facing their own death rate in Hemingway's "Indian Camp", most of us deny that inevitability and the end of the story Prove to the line: "Early father's boat and stood in the stern, the morning lake felt that he would not die" (31) His first time at the beginning of his life experience , Most of us are far away as they teach me to link at the moment of pleasure, coupled with his first experience of violence committed suicide in the same environment, he feels death is easy to understand I felt that there was nothing.
Comparison of Updike's A & P and Joyce Arabs John Updike's A & P and James Joyce Arabs have many of the same literary functions. The main focus of the two stories is centered on young people who are forced to decipher the difference between cruel reality and romantic fancies in his mind. In fact, this person found a difference, which put him in an emotional collapse situation. The main similarity between the two stories is that the hero is also the main character and focuses on one person who puts together all unrelated feelings and creates incredible but unrealistic expectations for women for women It is that it is. .
"Araby" and "Eveline" by James Joyce show the importance of Catholicism in the lives of the two main characters, using religious symbols of "Araby" and "Eveline" Joyce. Both talks are held in Dublin, Ireland, where Catholic faith is very strong. In "Arabic", a notorious "falling" image is presented to the reader in the second paragraph, indicating its importance. The theme of religious masses is in Evelyn. The concept of "Araby" by James Joyce seems to be developed around James Joyce 's short story "Araby" (Araby), but it seems to be a big controversy. This includes various political issues or controversies, including freedom of speech or issues related to these issues, but this is controversial. This is a simpler question. Can a little boy in this story have a deep emotional understanding at the end of the story? Through the last sentence (Arabi, 398), I clearly did not make it