''Dubliners'' is a collection of fifteen
short stories by
James Joyce
James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (born James Augusta Joyce; 2 February 1882 – 13 January 1941) was an Irish novelist, poet, and literary critic. He contributed to the modernist avant-garde movement and is regarded as one of the most influentia ...
, first published in 1914. It presents a
naturalistic depiction of Irish
middle class
The middle class refers to a class of people in the middle of a social hierarchy, often defined by occupation, income, education, or social status. The term has historically been associated with modernity, capitalism and political debate. C ...
life in and around
Dublin
Dublin is the capital and largest city of Republic of Ireland, Ireland. Situated on Dublin Bay at the mouth of the River Liffey, it is in the Provinces of Ireland, province of Leinster, and is bordered on the south by the Dublin Mountains, pa ...
in the early years of the 20th century.
The stories were written when
Irish nationalism was at its peak, and a search for a national identity and purpose was raging; at a crossroads of history and culture, Ireland was jolted by various converging ideas and influences. Joyce felt Irish nationalism, like
Catholicism
The Catholic Church (), also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the List of Christian denominations by number of members, largest Christian church, with 1.27 to 1.41 billion baptized Catholics Catholic Church by country, worldwid ...
and
British rule of Ireland, was responsible for a collective paralysis. He conceived of ''Dubliners'' as a "nicely polished looking-glass" held up to the Irish and a "first step towards
heir
Inheritance is the practice of receiving private property, titles, debts, entitlements, privileges, rights, and obligations upon the death of an individual. The rules of inheritance differ among societies and have changed over time. Offi ...
spiritual liberation".
Joyce's concept of epiphany is exemplified in the moment a character experiences self-understanding or illumination. The first three stories in the collection are narrated by child protagonists, while the subsequent stories are written in the
third person and deal with the lives and concerns of progressively older people, in line with Joyce's division of the collection into "childhood, adolescence, maturity, and public life". Many of the characters in ''Dubliners'' later appeared in minor roles in Joyce's novel ''
Ulysses''.
Publication history
Between 1905, when Joyce first sent a manuscript to a publisher, and 1914, when the book was finally published (on 15 June), Joyce submitted the book eighteen times to a total of fifteen publishers. The London house of
Grant Richards agreed to publish it in 1905. Its printer, however, refused to set one of the stories ("
Two Gallants"), and Richards then began to press Joyce to remove a number of other passages that he claimed the printer also refused to set. Under protest, Joyce eventually agreed to some of the requested changes, but Richards ended up backing out of the deal.
Joyce submitted the manuscript to other publishers, and, about three years later (1909), he found a willing candidate in Maunsel & Roberts of Dublin. A similar controversy developed, and Maunsel too refused to publish the collection, even threatening to sue Joyce for printing costs already incurred. Joyce offered to pay the printing costs himself if the sheets were turned over to him and he was allowed to complete the job elsewhere and distribute the book, but, when he arrived at the printers, they refused to surrender the sheets and burned them the next day, though Joyce managed to save one copy, which he obtained 'by ruse'. He returned to submitting the manuscript to other publishers, and in 1914 Grant Richards once again agreed to publish the book, using the
page proofs saved from Maunsel as
copy.
Stories
* "
The Sisters" – After the priest Father James Flynn dies, a young boy who was close to him hears some less-than-flattering stories about the father.
* "
An Encounter" – Two schoolboys playing truant encounter a perverted, middle-aged man.
* "
Araby" – A boy falls in love with the sister of his friend Mangan, but fails in his quest to buy her a worthy gift from the Araby Bazaar.
* "
Eveline" – The young Eveline Hill weighs her decision to flee Ireland with a sailor, Frank, to '
Buenos Ayres'.
* "
After the Race" – College student Jimmy Doyle tries to fit in with his wealthy friends.
* "
Two Gallants" –
Lenehan wanders around Dublin to kill time while waiting to hear if his friend,
Corley, was able to con a maid out of some money.
* "
The Boarding House" – Mrs Mooney successfully manoeuvres her daughter Polly into an upwardly mobile marriage with her lodger, Bob Doran.
* "
A Little Cloud" – Thomas Malone "Little" Chandler's dinner with his old friend Ignatius Gallaher, who left home to become a journalist in London, casts fresh light on his own failed literary dreams.
* "
Counterparts" – Farrington, a lumbering alcoholic
scrivener, takes out his frustration in pubs and on his son Tom.
* "
Clay
Clay is a type of fine-grained natural soil material containing clay minerals (hydrous aluminium phyllosilicates, e.g. kaolinite, ). Most pure clay minerals are white or light-coloured, but natural clays show a variety of colours from impuriti ...
" – Maria, a spinster who works in the kitchen at a large
Magdalene laundry, celebrates
Halloween
Halloween, or Hallowe'en (less commonly known as Allhalloween, All Hallows' Eve, or All Saints' Eve), is a celebration geography of Halloween, observed in many countries on 31 October, the eve of the Western Christianity, Western Christian f ...
with a man she
cared for, Joe, as a child and his family, the Donnellys.
* "
A Painful Case" – James Duffy rebuffs the advances of his friend Emily Sinico, and, four years later, discovers he condemned her to loneliness and death.
* "
Ivy Day in the Committee Room" – Several paid
canvassers for a minor politician, Richard Tierney, discuss the memory of
Charles Stewart Parnell.
* "
A Mother
"A Mother" is a short story by James Joyce published in his 1914 collection ''Dubliners.'' The story centers around a mother who secures a role for her daughter in a series of concerts.
Plot summary
The story starts with a brief description of M ...
" – To win a place of pride for her daughter Kathleen in the
Irish Revival, Mrs Kearney arranges for the girl to be
accompanist at a series of poorly planned concerts, but her efforts backfire.
* "
Grace" – Tom Kernan passes out and falls down the stairs at a bar, so his friends attempt to convince him to come to a
Catholic
The Catholic Church (), also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the List of Christian denominations by number of members, largest Christian church, with 1.27 to 1.41 billion baptized Catholics Catholic Church by country, worldwid ...
retreat to help him reform.
* "
The Dead" – After a holiday party thrown by his aunts and cousin, the Morkans, Gabriel Conroy's wife, Gretta, tells him about a boyfriend, Michael Furey from her youth, and he has an
epiphany about life and death and human connection. (At 15–16,000 words, this story has been classified as a
novella
A novella is a narrative prose fiction whose length is shorter than most novels, but longer than most novelettes and short stories. The English word ''novella'' derives from the Italian meaning a short story related to true (or apparently so) ...
.)
Also originally considered for the ''Dubliners'' collection was a short story called "''Christmas Eve''". It was rejected by the author, though a sentence of it was later reincorporated into ''Clay''.
Style
Besides first-person and third-person
narration, ''Dubliners'' employs
free indirect discourse and shifts in narrative point of view. The collection progresses chronologically, beginning with stories of youth and progressing in age to culminate in "
The Dead". Throughout, Joyce can be said to maintain "invisibility", to use his own term for authorial effacement. He wrote the stories "in a style of scrupulous meanness", withholding comment on what is "seen and heard". ''Dubliners'' can be seen as a preface to the two novels that will follow, and like them it "seeks a presentation so sharp that comment by the author would be interference".
Joyce's modernist style entailed using dashes for dialogue rather than quotation marks. He asked that they be used in the printed text, but was refused. ''Dubliners'' was the only work by Joyce to use quotation marks, but dashes are now substituted in all critical and most popular editions.
The impersonal narration doesn't mean that Joyce is undetectable in ''Dubliners''. There are autobiographical elements and possible versions of Joyce had he not left Dublin. The Dublin he remembers is recreated in the specific geographic details, including road names, buildings, and businesses. Joyce freely admitted that his characters and places were closely based on reality. (Because of these details, at least one potential publisher, Maunsel and Company, rejected the book for fear of libel lawsuits.)
Ezra Pound
Ezra Weston Loomis Pound (30 October 1885 – 1 November 1972) was an List of poets from the United States, American poet and critic, a major figure in the early modernist poetry movement, and a Collaboration with Nazi Germany and Fascist Ita ...
argued that, with the necessary changes, "these stories could be retold of any town", that Joyce "gives us things as they are... for any city", by "getting at the universal element beneath" particulars.
Joyce referred to the collection as "a series of
epicleti", alluding to the
transubstantiation of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ. He is said to have "often agreed... that 'imagination is nothing but the working over of what is remembered. But he used the
eucharist
The Eucharist ( ; from , ), also called Holy Communion, the Blessed Sacrament or the Lord's Supper, is a Christianity, Christian Rite (Christianity), rite, considered a sacrament in most churches and an Ordinance (Christianity), ordinance in ...
as a metaphor, characterizing the artist as "a priest of the eternal imagination, transmuting the daily bread of experience into the radiant body of everliving life".
The theme of ''Dubliners'', "what holds
he storiestogether and makes them a book
shinted on the first page", the "paralysis" or "living death" of which Joyce spoke in a letter of 1904.
The concept of "
epiphany", defined in ''Stephen Hero'' as "a sudden spiritual manifestation", has been adapted as a narrative device in five stories in ''Dubliners'', in the form of a character's self-realization at the end of the narrative. One critic has suggested that the concept is the basis of an overall narrative strategy, "the commonplace things of Dublin
ecomingembodiments or symbols . . . of paralysis". A later critic, avoiding the term "epiphany", but apparently not the concept, has examined in considerable detail how "
church and
state manifest themselves in ''Dubliners''" as agents of paralysis. There are numerous such "manifestations".
What immediately distinguishes the stories from Joyce's later works is their apparent simplicity and transparency. Some critics have been led into drawing facile conclusions. The stories have been pigeonholed, seen as realist or naturalist, or instead labeled symbolist. The term "epiphany" has been taken as synonymous with symbol. Critical analysis of elements of stories or stories in their entirety has been problematic. ''Dubliners'' may have occasioned more conflicting interpretations than any other modern literary work.
It's been said that ''Dubliners'' is unique, defying any form of classification, and perhaps no interpretation can ever be conclusive. The only certainty is that it's a "masterpiece" in its own right and "a significant stepping-stone . . . into the modernist structure of Joyce's mature work".
Christ in ''Dubliners''
On 10 June 1904, Joyce met
Nora Barnacle for the first time. They met again on 16 June. On both days, the Feast of the Sacred Heart was celebrated in Irish Catholic churches. The feast originated on another 16 June, in 1675. A young nun,
Margaret Mary Alacoque, had visions of Christ exposing his heart. During the so-called "great apparition" on that date, he asked that a new feast be established to commemorate his suffering. (In the Library episode, Mulligan calls the nun "Blessed Margaret Mary Anycock!") The Feast of the
Sacred Heart was formally approved in the same year. The
Jesuits
The Society of Jesus (; abbreviation: S.J. or SJ), also known as the Jesuit Order or the Jesuits ( ; ), is a religious order (Catholic), religious order of clerics regular of pontifical right for men in the Catholic Church headquartered in Rom ...
popularized the devotion, and Ireland was the first nation to dedicate itself to the Sacred Heart.
The young nun claimed that Christ had made 12 promises to all who would dedicate themselves to the Sacred Heart. The 12th promise offers "salvation to the one who receives communion on nine consecutive First Fridays". Mrs. Kiernan in the ''Dubliners'' story "Grace" and Mr. Kearney in "A Mother" try to take advantage of this promise, as did Stephen's mother. A colored print of the 12 promises hangs on Eveline's wall, and there are resemblances between her and Margaret Mary Alacoque and between Frank, her "open-hearted" suitor, and the Sacred Heart. Both young women have been made a promise of salvation by a man professing love.
Hugh Kenner argues that Frank has no intention of taking Eveline to
Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires, controlled by the government of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Argentina. It is located on the southwest of the Río de la Plata. Buenos Aires is classified as an Alpha− glob ...
and will seduce and abandon her in Liverpool, where the boat is actually headed. Since "going to Buenos Aires" was slang for "taking up a life of prostitution", it appears that Frank does intend to take Eveline to Buenos Aires, but not to make her his wife. That Eveline's print of the 12 promises made by the Sacred Heart hangs over a "broken" harmonium confirms the close similarity between the two suitors. In "Circe", the Sacred Heart devotion is concisely parodied in the apparition of Martha Clifford, Bloom's pen pal. She calls Bloom a "heartless flirt" and accuses him of "breach of promise".
Media adaptations
*
Hugh Leonard adapted six stories as ''Dublin One'', which was staged at the Gate Theatre, Dublin, in 1963.
* In 1987,
John Huston directed a
film adaptation of "The Dead", written for the screen by his son
Tony and starring his daughter
Anjelica as Mrs. Conroy.
* In October 1998,
BBC Radio 4 broadcast dramatisations by various writers of "
A Painful Case", "
After the Race", "
Two Gallants", "
The Boarding House", "
A Little Cloud", and "
Counterparts". The series ended with a dramatization of "The Dead", which was first broadcast in 1994 under the title "Distant Music". The broadcasts were accompanied by nighttime abridged readings of other stories from ''Dubliners'', starting with "
Ivy Day in the Committee Room" (in two parts, read by
T. P. McKenna), and continuing with "
The Sisters", "
An Encounter", "
Araby", "
Eveline", and "
Clay
Clay is a type of fine-grained natural soil material containing clay minerals (hydrous aluminium phyllosilicates, e.g. kaolinite, ). Most pure clay minerals are white or light-coloured, but natural clays show a variety of colours from impuriti ...
" (all read by
Barry McGovern).
* In 1999, a short
film adaptation of "Araby" was produced and directed by Dennis Courtney.
* In 2000, a
Tony Award
The Antoinette Perry Award for Excellence in Broadway Theatre, more commonly known as a Tony Award, recognizes excellence in live Broadway theatre. The awards are presented by the American Theatre Wing and The Broadway League at an annual ce ...
-winning
musical adaptation of "The Dead" premiered, written by Richard Nelson and Shaun Davey and directed by Nelson.
* In April 2012,
Stephen Rea read "The Dead" on
RTÉ Radio 1.
* In February 2014, Stephen Rea read all fifteen stories spread across twenty 13-minute segments of ''
Book at Bedtime'' on
BBC Radio 4.
* In July 2014, Irish actor Carl Finnegan released a modern retelling of "Two Gallants" as a short film. Finnegan wrote the script with Darren McGrath and also produced, directed, and performed the role of Corley in the film.
* In May 2023, Irish folk music act Hibsen released the album ''The Stern Task of Living'', inspired by ''Dubliners''. The 15-track album by duo Gráinne Hunt and Jim Murphy follows the sequence of the stories in the novel, with each song based on the story after which it is named.
References
Sources
*
*
*
* Reprinted 1995 as .
Further reading
;General
*
Ellmann, Richard. ''James Joyce''. Oxford University Press, 1959, revised edition 1983.
*
Burgess, Anthony. ''Here Comes Everybody: An Introduction to James Joyce for the Ordinary Reader'' (1965); also published as ''Re Joyce''.
*
Burgess, Anthony. ''Joysprick: An Introduction to the Language of James Joyce'' (1973)
;Dubliners
* Benstock, Bernard. ''Narrative Con/Texts in Dubliners''. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994. .
*
Bloom, Harold. ''James Joyce's Dubliners''. New York: Chelsea House, 1988. .
* Bosinelli Bollettieri, Rosa Maria and Harold Frederick Mosher, eds. ''ReJoycing: New Readings of Dubliners''. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1998. .
*
Cross, Amanda. ''The James Joyce Murder''. New York: Macmillan, 1967.
* Frawley, Oona. ''A New & Complex Sensation: Essays on Joyce's Dubliners''. Dublin: Lilliput, 2004. .
* Hart, Clive. ''James Joyce's Dubliners: Critical Essays''. London: Faber, 1969. .
* Ingersoll, Earl G. ''Engendered Trope in Joyce's Dubliners''. Carbondale: Southern Illinois UP, 1996. .
*
Kenner, Hugh. ''Dublin's Joyce''. Chatto & Windus, 1955.
* Norris, Margot, ed. ''Dubliners: Authoritative Text, Contexts, Criticism''. New York: Norton, 2006. .
*
Pound, Ezra. "''Dubliners'' and Mr James Joyce," ''Literary Essays of Ezra Pound''. London: Faber and Faber, 1918. 399–402
* Thacker, Andrew, ed. ''Dubliners: James Joyce''. New Casebook Series. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. .
External links
*
*
Spark Notes''Dubliners'' at the British Library
Grant Richards Ltd, London, 1914digitised copy of first edition from
Internet Archive
The Internet Archive is an American 501(c)(3) organization, non-profit organization founded in 1996 by Brewster Kahle that runs a digital library website, archive.org. It provides free access to collections of digitized media including web ...
*
{{Authority control
1914 short story collections
Modernist short stories
Short story collections by James Joyce
Irish short story collections
20th-century short stories
Short stories set in Dublin (city)
Saint Patrick's Day fiction