Obscenities and Blasphemy in Dead and Dubliners by James Joyce

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The Impression of Gabriel in The Dead

If there has ever been an author in history that can get away with writing about bodily functions and sexual desires, it is Mr. James Joyce. His works have not only seen the ugly side of criticism but have even been placed under trial. His novella “Dubliners” was banned due to accusations of obscenities and blasphemy. Yet, many critics and writers, including Ezra Pound, saw Joyce’s work as avant-garde and evolutionary. Despite the many obstacles Joyce endured, his works were published and proposed a different design to literary art. “Dubliners” in particular, introduced a style of writing that broke off from the conventional structures, at the time, of English literature. Joyce wrote the novella as a collection of stories from childhood to maturity. The final story of the novella is entitled, “The Dead” and takes place in only a few hours. Joyce wrote “The Dead” in the exact model of what would be considered literary impressionism. He did not glorify the characters nor did he describe any of them with intensity. He presented them individually and allowed their dialogue to unfold their lives. The third person omniscient narrator acted as the conscience of the characters. Julia Van Gunsteren defines literary impressionism as a representation of objective reality that renders life as is. According to Gunsteren, an impressionist literary work contains certain elements that create the reality it sets out to depict. She states that, “the logic of literary impressionism suggests that the correspondence between perception of the factors and interpretation of the signals is never certain, and that reality is always inscrutable” (Gunsteren 19). Reality is not defined by our minds’ limitations, but rath...

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... protagonist rather than on descriptions and dialogue scenes. James Joyce’s “The Dead” is now, has been, and will always be a perfect piece of impressionism.

Works Cited

Gunsteren, Julia Van. Katherine Mansfield and Literary Impressionism. Amsterdam: …………….Rodopi, 1990. 19-20. Print.

Joyce, James. "The Dead." Dubliners. N.p.: n.p., n.d. 85-111. Www.gutenberg.org. ……………Web. 26 Apr. 2014.

Pound, Ezra. ""Dubliners and Mr James Joyce." Rev. of Dubliners. Egoist 15 June …………..1914: 267. Modernist Journals Project. Web. 04 May 2014. …………...

Pound, Ezra. "James Joyce: At Last The Novel Appears." The Egoist 4.2 (1917): 21-……………22. Modernist Journals Project. Web. 02 May 2014. …………...

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