¶ … Ignorance Bliss? A Comparison and Contrast of the Characters and Themes of Sandra Cisneros' "The House on Mango Street" and "Araby" by James Joyce
Plot Summary
Character Summary
Ignorance, although comfortable is not bliss at all.
Character
Gender
Age Difference
Culture
Catholicism and sexuality in Joyce
Catholicism and family in Cisneros
Home
Significance of home in Cisneros
Significance of leaving home in Joyce
Both the protagonists of Sandra Cisneros and "Araby" by James Joyce are young adolescents, poised upon the brink of realizing that older people do not have all of the answer in life. The tales detail the coming of age of the young protagonists, as they realize that the adults in their respective worlds are not as good or wise as they seem to be. Cisneros's female heroine comes to her realization when she is contrasting the promises of her family about the house on Mango Street her mother and father purchase, and the white picket fences of the houses she sees on the television screen. Joyce's hero experiences a sexual betrayal when an older woman the young man admires asks him to bring her something from the fair at Araby. At Araby, he loses his idealized image of her as well as his money. The two young characters emerge sadder but wiser from their tales, and both authors suggest that although ignorance can seem blissful, ignorance is a state of mind one must abandon to become an adult in an often deceitful world.
However, the processes by which the two main characters come to their central realizations about the corrupted nature of adult life are profoundly different because...
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