The division of female characters in "Frankenstein" and "Arab" is very passive. Both Mary Shelley and James Joyce encourage readers to think about the social status of women at the time. Women of these novels are considered material items, and male characters have little privilege. In Frankenstein, Elizabeth Lavenza is depicted as an object with minimal rights and privileges. She is portrayed as a property protected by Victor Frankenstein. Likewise, the Arabs described Mangan's sister's character as an obedient sex.
In Arabia, the Arabs themselves - the market - gather and collect people buying things for everyday life and vanity. Because the market was closed due to his imagination, he desperately took him away, so the hero went to Arabi to buy something for his crush, but there was no result It was. In the process we will try to find ourselves everyday. Sony's blues and arabies can become our baseline, it is a real scene, which will help us a lot, as it is reflected in the story, we can find the right way by ourselves I can do it. Our eyes can be seen, ears are heard, mouths can speak, but our mind feels that we can understand the diversity of life without giving us discrimination
The division of female characters in "Frankenstein" and "Arab" is very passive. Both Mary Shelley and James Joyce encourage readers to think about the social status of women at the time. Women of these novels are considered material items, and male characters have little privilege. In Frankenstein, Elizabeth Lavenza is depicted as an object with minimal rights and privileges. She is portrayed as a property protected by Victor Frankenstein. Likewise, the Arabs described Mangan's sister's character as an obedient sex.
"Arabic", a young Arab James Joyce experience of James Joyce, is a simple story of the young passion of the harsh economic times. The main character of this story is a boy living in a desolate environment, intertwined with the passion of youth, frustration, reality. A narrator's statement about the environment around the boy enhances the desolate environment of this age. "Arabi" tells us the loneliness of youth, the joy of youthful passion, and the realization of losing dreams.