Unexpected Realizations in The Dubliners by James Joyce

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James Joyce incorporates many things into his short stories in The Dubliners, whether that is religion, alcohol, women’s issues, relationships or epiphany. Most of these things have a way of coming back to reflect different points in his life. Each story has a way of portraying one, if not more of these subjects. Sometimes relationships can lead to many emotions and sometimes unexpected things happen. You can say these unexpected things can cause someone to experience and epiphany, which can be defined as a sudden or striking realization. A day of hooky of finally talking to a crush may seem like a great idea, but when ideas turn into actions the results are not always wanted. And it is then that a person realizes that it is something they do not want. Joyce uses relationships in “Araby” and “An Encounter” to highlight his overarching theme of epiphany.

“Araby” begins with a boy seeking the attention of one of his friends, Mangan, sisters and “begins to dwell on her soft presence, and eventually adores her with an ecstasy of secret love” (Stone 352). The boy becomes fascinated with the girl and “the picture of Mangan’s sister that first sinks unforgettably into the boy’s receptive mind is of the girl calling and waiting at her doorstep in the dusk” (Stone 355). He begins to relish this moment of her when she is calling for her brother to come home from playing with his friends. The boy begins to wonder if he will ever gain enough courage to talk to her and “his eyes often fill with tears, emotion floods from his heart; he wonders how he could ever tell her of his confused adoration” (Stone 360). After barely saying a word to each other, one morning, the girl asks the boy if he is going to Araby, a Dublin bazaar, saying she cannot go. He notices so many things about her as she talks, from the way “she turns her silver bracelet round and round her wrist” (Stone 362) to the way her hair shined from the light by the door. He was so intrigued by this girl he hardly knew. The boy is so shocked from their conversation and then decides that he will bring her back a gift from the bazaar. In his mind, buying her a gift will assure him another conversation with this girl. This gives the boy hope that maybe something could spark between the two. During this time, it begins to show the boys feelings for her and gives a sense that something could happen after the fair. He his so mesmerized by this girl that it’s difficult to think that something won’t spark between the two.

Young boys normally have huge imaginations and are willing to break the rules to have fun. In “An Encounter” by James Joyce, the boys “disrupt their identity as a subject of school by desiring adventure and escape from another layer of civil society which is instrumental in colonizing desire and limiting freedom” (Murphy 15). The three boys enjoy letting their imagination run wild as they play cowboys and Indians in the evenings after school. “The adventures related in the literature of the Wild West were so remote from the narrator’s nature he explains that it still open doors of escape” (Murphy 12). Even though some did not enjoy playing such game, their sense of adventure never faded. There were times when their sense of adventure found its way into the classroom. Father Butle...

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.... When the man recognized the boys he made a circle to in order to sit next to the young pair. He started off with small talk about the weather and then he slowly started to speak about the boys having a sweetheart and how it was perfectly fine to have such a thing as a young lad. The man went into a rant speaking on how young girls were so great and how he wished that he were a schoolboy again. The conversation started to make things kind of awkward with the two boys. After a while the man excused himself from their little chat. When he left then young boy sat there staring into the ground as if they were thinking about the odd words of this odd man. Meanwhile Mahony sat there being the Indian and called the old man an “old josser” (Joyce16). When the man returned, Mahony ran off chasing the cat again. The old man and the boy sat there watching as he persuades the cat up a wall. The old man then started a conversation on if Mahony was the type of kid to get whipped a lot while in school. The conversation quickly turned into the man speaking on how he loved to chastise young boys and it started to seem that he would like to whip Mahony. When it started to seem that old man was pleading for the boy to agree with his desire to whip a kid like Mahony; he saw that it was the perfect time to leave the queer conversation. As he walked away, he then had that sudden realization that the one thing he wanted more than anything was to return back home to ordinary life; for having an adventure was not what he expected. And as he walked away and called for Mahony, he had another epiphany. He noticed that he truly despised Mahony.

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