Preview

Irish People and Father Flynn

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
2342 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Irish People and Father Flynn
In order to answer the broad question, the term ‘possibility’ will be analysed in the context of the characters of the texts and in the ‘possibility’ for their personal growth and opportunity for change, be it spiritual, physical or emotional. The essay will focus thematically on four chosen texts: James Joyce’s The Sisters and Langston Hughes’ poems I, too, New Yorkers and Harlem. Firstly this essay will analyse how the city of Dublin represented in The Sisters is shown, through Joyce’s literary devices, to both offer and restrict possibility for each of its central characters. Key themes identified will then be used as a basis for further analysis of how these themes are more widely represented within the selected New York poems to either confirm or refute Lehan’s statement that ‘The city both offers and restricts possibility’.

Textual analysis of The Sisters reveals numerous literary devices that explicate the theme of the repression of possibility by the city of its people. Throughout, Joyce uses symbolism, metaphors, and ellipsis to emphasise his themes whilst allowing the reader to infer its meanings without the need to describe them explicitly. The italicised words ’paralysis’, ‘gnomon’ and ‘simony’ (page 1) is one such technique and immediately underscores the physical, spiritual and religious restrictions found within the story that Dubliners symbolises as a ‘paralysis’ (p1) of the city and its people.

The story’s young, intelligent, and sensitive (unnamed) protagonist comes to experience first-hand the reality of paralysis and death: he achieves his desire to ‘look upon’ (p1) both the physical paralysis and death of Father Flynn, with whom he was ‘great friends’ (p2) and the more subtle psychological ‘paralysis’ of those around him – his Aunt, Uncle Jack, Eliza and Nanny Flynn and Mr Cotter. The story shows that the Dublin adults are mentally immobilised – metaphorically paralysed, by their conformity to the conventions of their city lives,



Bibliography: • A230 Assignment Guide,( 2010) TMA 04, Open University press • Bremen, B (1984) “He Was Too Scrupulous Always": A Re-Examination of Joyce 's "The Sisters” James Joyce Quarterly , Vol. 22, No. 1 pp. 55-66 • Haslam, S & Asbee, S (2012) The Twentieth Century, Twentieth-Century Cities, Open University Press • Haslam, S & Asbee, S (2012) The Twentieth Century, ‘Readings for part 1’, Open University Press • James Joyce (2000 [1914]) Dubliners (with an introduction and notes by Terence Brown), Penguin Modern Classics, London, Penguin. • Walzl, F (1965) The life chronology of the Dubliners , James Joyce Quarterley Websites: • A230-11J, Study Guide: Week 26: Extra Resources, Milton Keynes, The Open University, http://learn.open.ac.uk/file.php/7066/ebook_a230_book3_pt1_chpt4_langston-hughes-poetry_l3.pdf (accessed 21st March 2012) • http://us.penguingroup.com/static/rguides/us/dubliners.html

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    The piece opens immediately with the rhetorical triple “Henry is sleeping, bruised and caked with blood.” This syndetic list of verbs highlight Clare’s anxiety and immediately draw the reader into her emotions, as we wonder, like Clare how he ended up in this way. This level of anxiety is highlighted through her use of declaratives such as “I get up and make coffee” where the simple every day…

    • 1440 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Breaker Mourant

    • 1652 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Bibliography: 1- Gilbert, Martin. A History of the Twentieth Century. New York: W. Morrow, 1997. Print.…

    • 1652 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Analysis Of The Sniper

    • 468 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The year 10 pupils of saint patrick college should find this story interesting. It uses a large range of vocabulary and keeps the reader in suspense and making us want to read it more. It explains the setting/characters very well, for example “The long june twilight faded into night. Dublin lay enveloped in darkness but for the dim light of the moon that shone through fleecy clouds, casting a pale light as of approaching dawn over the streets and dark waters of liffey”. As you can see, in the first two sentences of the piece of writing it explain the setting extremely well and creates a depressive/mysterious theme.…

    • 468 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Why US entered WW1

    • 332 Words
    • 2 Pages

    References: Keylor, William R. (2011). The Twentieth-Century World and Beyond. Oxford University Press, Sixth Edition.…

    • 332 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dubliners is a collection of short stories in which the author, James Joyce, presents the lives of several individuals from all ages living in Dublin during the Victorian era.…

    • 688 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Last September

    • 1267 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Published in 1929 The Last September written by Elizabeth Bowen highlights the difficulties which faced the Irish-Anglo genre. It was one of many novels published in the nineteenth and twentieth century, based on “Big House” life in Ireland. Bowen herself is critical of the Anglo-Irish gentry as she believes that they are responsible for the downfall in the society. The denial of their predicament and also their refusal to except change had caused Bowen to be censorious of them. She expresses her points of symbolism, imagery and characterization using a variety of tactful techniques. In the analysis these factors and techniques will be discussed in greater detail.…

    • 1267 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eveline

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages

    danger of her father’s violance”(Joyce,4). Eveline is trying to tell herself that she “has a…

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Feminism in Dubliners

    • 1336 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Joyce furthers his pro-feministic views by portraying women in a realistic way. His reflection of reality does not imply that he agrees with the reality, because the entire book is a critical exposition of society in Ireland, as well as the mental and political paralysis of its people. Joyce’s portrayal of reality is meant to be a sort of “bitter medicine” for the social and moral disease that paralyzes the female society. His way of representing females is truthful, and causes the problem of inequality to stand prominently in his reader’s minds. He portrays them in a way that reflects reality, not in the misguided and ignorant way that eighteenth century society viewed them. His readers are forced to realize the cruel actuality that women endure, which is how he gets his pro-feminist views across, and in a sense, forces an epiphany onto his readers.…

    • 1336 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    James Joyce Counterparts

    • 960 Words
    • 3 Pages

    This section details the first arm wrestle between Farrington and Weathers. During the match, Weathers finds it particularly easy compared to Farrington, bringing his hand down slowly only after 30 seconds. Farrington gets extremely embarrassed about this and he flushes a dark red with anger and humiliation. We momentarily go into Farrington’s mind as he calls Weathers a ‘stripling’, belittling him, however he then goes on to accusing him of cheating and putting his weight behind it. This is a sharp contrast of the ‘stripling’ that he used to describe him just before.…

    • 960 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The former tenant of our house, a priest, had died in the back drawing-room.” This statement shows the death of the church. Joyce longs to be free of the church and wishes that he could relinquish the ties that bind him to it, like the house. “The house was formerly own by a priest who has since passed away.” The death of the priest signifies the death of the church. The priest also has more significance to the story. He also represents the hypocrisy of the church. Although the priest was thought of as charitable he dies with a substantial sum of money which gives the impression that he had not been as charitable as he possibly could have been.” NORTH RICHMOND STREET being blind was a quiet street except at the hour when the Christian Brothers’ School set the boys free.” Joyce shows the Dubliners have now changed their way of living. By accepting a new church that meets their believes in religion. “North Richmond Street being blind was a quiet street” meaning that the citizens are still traumatized by the horrifying actions the Catholics did. However, Joyce points out the following “except at the hour when the Christian Brothers’ School set the boys free.” The innocent children are not aware the curtly the town has been through, thus bring life and hope to Dublin by the children.…

    • 1012 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    James Joyce, author of “Araby,” “Eveline,” and Ulysses, attempts to correct the way of life in his home town of Dublin, Ireland, through his works. He does this through the theme of coming of age and recurring religious allusions in “Araby”. Additionally, Joyce talks about family in “Eveline” through the themes of escape and betrayal. In Ulysses, he uses stream of consciousness to depict the importance of a father by rewriting Homer’s The Odyssey. James Joyce addresses many Irish problems of his time through his works: such as, religious issues in “Araby” and “Eveline” and social problems in Ulysses.…

    • 367 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The notion of boarding houses in James Joyce’s writing as open and fluid is not unique to this story. In Julieann Veronica Ulin’s criticism, “Fluid Boarders and Naughty Girls: Music, Domesticity, and Nation in Joyce’s Boarding Houses” she brings to light the idea that the open and transient nature of the boarding house is symbolic of the Irish nation at that time. Further, she uses the relationships and situations within the boarding house as metaphors or symbols for some of the other domestic problems Joyce views in his home nation.…

    • 1063 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Eveline

    • 3513 Words
    • 15 Pages

    James Joyce represents everyday life of Dublin in the early twentieth century in his collection of short stories, Dubliners. Dubliners consists of 15 stories and each of them unfolds lives of many different Dubliners vividly. By describing details of ordinary life and characters' inner life, which is described by their interior monologue, Joyce succeeds in showing the realistic landscape of the inner space of Dubliners as well as that of outer space, the city Dublin at the turn of the century. Joyce tries to emphasize the fact that Dublin is not in the healthy state by showing unhealthy Dubliners. In Dublin, both spiritual and physical fathers are abnormal and the mother who stands for maternal love and fertility is dead. In a word, as Joyce thought, Dublin was the center of the paralysis in this early twentieth century. Under these conditions of inanimate life, Dubliners are trying to escape from the city. Identifying their lethargic reality with the place Dublin, they think escaping is a way "to live" they want to leave for the exotic Eastern world such as Persia or Arabia, or a distant unknown country such as Brazil (Buenos Ayres) or the Europe. When they try to be free from the place, however, they experience the moment that their fantasy is broken and face the raw reality.…

    • 3513 Words
    • 15 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    James Joyce - An encounter

    • 1277 Words
    • 6 Pages

    5. James R. Cope & Wendy Patrick Cope, A teacher’s guide to the Signet Classic Edition of James Joyce’s Dubliners, N.Y. : Penguin, 1994…

    • 1277 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eveline Analysis

    • 535 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In James Joyce’s short story, Eveline, the main character illustrates that it can be a challenge to hold too tightly onto the past when faced with the futures uncertain path. The author makes it clear the Eveline, the girl, grows up dealing with death and suffering, and as a result she takes on the roll of her mother. She works extremely hard to support and care for her family in the way that her mother would have, but she frequently feels lonely and finds herself unhappy. The outcome of all of the change that is occurring in Eveline’s family life, results in relationships drifting apart, and her father growing unpleasant and mean with old age. Eveline feels that the only way to find happiness again is to embark in a new phase of her life with her lover, Frank. He has arranged for them to secretly travel away together, get married, and settle down. Although Eveline believes that she is ready to pursue a new life with Frank, when she is on the verge of leaving, empathetic feelings rush through her and the realization that she needs to move away from her “true home” quickly becomes short-lived.…

    • 535 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics