Zusammenfassung der Ressource
James Joyce
Dubliners
- Araby
- The Dead
- Grace
- After The Case
- A Mother
- Realistic Setting
- Rarely uses
Hyperbole
- Understanding people
and their environments
- Doesn't tell people what to think
- Allows them to come to
their own conclusions
- Lack of traditional dramatic resolution
- Allows his narrative voice
to gravitate towards the
voice of a textual
character
- The Dead's opening line
- The narrative lends itself to a
misuse of language typical of
the character being described
- Rarely uses
First Person
- Uses descriptions from the
characters' point of view
- Empirical Perspective
- An understanding of characters is often given
through an analysis of their possessions
- Detached but highly perceptive
narrative voice that displays the lives of
the characters in precise detail
- Only in three stories
- The Sisters, An Encounter & Araby
- Narrator never divulges his name
and rarely participates in
conversation
- It's possible for a person to observe
their own life from the outside
- Strange and mysterious events occur
that remain unexplained
- Points to details and suggestions,
but never completes the puzzle
- Although these events may not appear
profound, the characters' intensely
personal & often tragic certainly are
- Sketch daily situations in
which not much seems to
happen
- Routine
- Characters and events that were alarming
similar to real people and places
- The Sisters
- An Encounter
- Progression through Youth to Age
culminating in the dead
- Imagination in youth can mask
experiences, but it cannot reverse
them or make them disappear
- Clay
- All set throughout Dublin
- Fulfilment and contentedness
remain foreign to Dubliners
- Unfulfilled adventures
- All people experience frustrated
desire for love and new experiences
- Stories peer into home, hearts and minds of
people whose lives connect and intermingle
though the shared space and spirit of Dublin
- A character from one story will mention
the name of a character in another story
- Stories often have settings that
appear in other stories
- Such subtle connections create a sense
of shared experience and evoke a map of
Dublin life
- A looking-glass with which
the Irish could observe and
study themselves
- Ireland during the tumultuous 20th Century
- Splintered into factions of Protestants and
Catholic / Conservatives and Nationalists
- The link between paralysis or
inaction to both death and religion
underpins all the stories in Dubliners
- Characters face events that prevent
them from taking action of fulfilling
their desires
- Experience a kind of
death in life
- The Sisters
- The Death of Father Flynn
- Inability to talk about
death
- An Encounter
- Narrator's inability to
leave the man
- Scolding of Leo over the magazine
- Tensions between Catholics
and Protestants
- Significance of Titles
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