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Astonied in Dublin: An Analogy of the Relationships in James Joyce's Dubliners "Eveline" and "A Painful Case"

Title: Astonied in Dublin: An Analogy of the Relationships in James Joyce's Dubliners "Eveline" and "A Painful Case"

Term Paper , 2010 , 16 Pages

Autor:in: Julia Hermans (Author)

English Language and Literature Studies - Literature
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James Joyce’s book Dubliners is a collection of fifteen short stories and, as the name already tells, they are about the lives of people living in Dublin. The novellas are about men and women of every age. In the book are different stages of life. The story “Eveline” is a childhood story. The story “A Painful Case” is an adulthood story. Terence Brown describes the work „as a book of churches” (Brown XXX). For Joyce, church and faith are very important, and Dublin and its citizens are characterized by the Christian religion. Although the stories are all self-contained, the book can be read as a whole. As the reader will notice by reading there are many links between the different stories and they take place in the same city –Dublin. When James Joyce wrote the book, he had already left Ireland for France in order to study medicine. This could be a possible hint to why the book can, on the one hand, be seen as a book about Dubliners by a Dubliner but, on the other hand, it can be also seen as a book about Dublin from an outside perspective. David G. Wright emphasises that Dubliners shows how Joyce himself could have become if he had stayed in the capital of Ireland (Wright 14). Therefore, the book can be seen as an explanation and if there has to be one, as an apology for James Joyce, why he decided to leave Ireland. As Andrew Gibson states, the paralysis of the lives of the Dubliners, which is shown by Joyce, is “post-catastrophic” (Gibson 76), referring to the famine that brought many Irish into poverty.
This paper takes a closer look at the two stories “Eveline” and “A Painful Case”. The autobiographical aspect becomes obvious because David G. Wright writes that the main characters of these two stories are created after the model of James Joyce’s siblings Margaret and Stanislaus (Wright 22/23). Furthermore, as it will be examined in this paper, Dubliners relates Joyce’s own feelings about Dublin. Eveline tries to flee from Dublin and her family, unlike Mr. Duffy, the main character of “A Painful Case”, who is a loner and who is content to remain just where and how he is..

Excerpt


Inhaltsverzeichnis

1. Introduction

2. Eveline

2.1 Present life of Eveline

2.2 Eveline and her father

2.3 Eveline´s boyfriend Frank

2.4 Eveline and the window

2.5 Eveline and the harbour

2.6. Eveline´s collapse

3. A Painful Case

3.1 Mr. Duffy´s life

3.2 Mr. Duffy and Mrs. Sinico

3.3 Mrs. Sinico fallen in love with Mr. Duffy

3.4 The death of Mrs. Sinico

3.5 The loneliness of Mr. Duffy

4. Comparison

5. Conclusion

Zielsetzung & Themen

Diese wissenschaftliche Arbeit untersucht die Analogien in den zwischenmenschlichen Beziehungen der Protagonisten in James Joyces Kurzgeschichten "Eveline" und "A Painful Case". Der Fokus liegt auf der Analyse, wie die Unfähigkeit zur Veränderung und emotionale Lähmung die Lebensentscheidungen der Charaktere maßgeblich beeinflussen und letztlich zu ihrem Scheitern führen.

  • Parallelen und Unterschiede zwischen "Eveline" und "A Painful Case"
  • Die Rolle von Routine und emotionaler Bindung
  • Autobiographische Aspekte im Werk von James Joyce
  • Die symbolische Bedeutung von Dublin als Ort der Stagnation

Auszug aus dem Buch

2.3 Eveline´s boyfriend Frank

After that part of the story, Joyce goes into more detail about Eveline’s plan to emigrate. This is the first time her boyfriend Frank, with whom she wants to go to Buenos Ayres, is mentioned. Due to the fact that James Joyce writes “First of all it had been an excitement for her to have a fellow and then she had begun to like him.”(Joyce 32) the reader becomes aware of the fact that this was not love at first sight and perhaps that it is not real love at all. It is maybe just the love for the idea to flee from Ireland. And he is her only chance to realise this idea. If anything, the relation with Frank provides a feeling of security and happiness, which stands in sharp contrast to the relationship with her father.

Donald T. Torchiana describes Eveline’s connection to Frank as “Her only salvation lies in her suitor Frank.” (Torchiana 73) which shows that Frank is rather a saver than a lover for Eveline. She sees in him a way to get out and that is the first point for her for her. It could be seen when James Joyce writes “he would give her life, perhaps love, too. But she wanted to live.” (Joyce 33) It becomes obvious when one get to know about her feelings in her mind: in her opinion life is more important than love. However, her father is against Eveline’s relationship with Frank, so they have to meet secretly (Joyce 32). This fact implicates also that Eveline is not able to do or even say something against her father. In order to avoid conflicts she meets Frank without saying one word to her father.

Zusammenfassung der Kapitel

1. Introduction: Dieses Kapitel führt in James Joyces Dubliners ein und thematisiert die autobiographischen Bezüge sowie das zentrale Motiv der Lähmung im Leben der Dubliner.

2. Eveline: Hier wird das Leben der jungen Protagonistin Eveline analysiert, die zwischen familiärer Pflicht und dem Wunsch nach Flucht aus Dublin zerrissen ist.

3. A Painful Case: Die Analyse konzentriert sich auf das starre, routinegeprägte Leben von Mr. Duffy und die verhängnisvolle Dynamik seiner Beziehung zu Mrs. Sinico.

4. Comparison: Dieses Kapitel vergleicht die Schicksale von Eveline und Mr. Duffy hinsichtlich ihrer Unfähigkeit, aus ihren eingefahrenen Lebensstrukturen auszubrechen.

5. Conclusion: Abschließend wird festgehalten, dass beide Protagonisten an ihren Lebensumständen scheitern, da sie nicht die Kraft zur notwendigen Veränderung aufbringen.

Schlüsselwörter

James Joyce, Dubliners, Eveline, A Painful Case, Stagnation, Paralyse, Flucht, zwischenmenschliche Beziehungen, emotionale Isolation, Routine, literarische Analyse, Kurzgeschichte, Identität, Buenos Ayres, Scheitern.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Worum geht es in dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit grundlegend?

Die Arbeit analysiert die thematischen Ähnlichkeiten und psychologischen Parallelen zwischen den Kurzgeschichten "Eveline" und "A Painful Case" von James Joyce.

Was sind die zentralen Themenfelder der Analyse?

Zu den zentralen Themen gehören familiäre Belastungen, die Suche nach emotionaler Erfüllung, die Auswirkungen von starren Lebensroutinen sowie das Motiv der Unfähigkeit zur persönlichen Veränderung.

Welches Ziel verfolgt die Forschungsarbeit?

Das primäre Ziel ist es, aufzuzeigen, warum die Hauptfiguren beider Geschichten an der Bewältigung ihres Lebens scheitern und welche Rolle ihre soziale Umwelt dabei spielt.

Welche wissenschaftliche Methode wird in dieser Untersuchung verwendet?

Die Arbeit nutzt eine textnahe literaturwissenschaftliche Analyse und stützt sich auf die Sekundärliteratur bekannter Joyce-Forscher wie Clive Hart und David G. Wright.

Was wird im Hauptteil der Arbeit behandelt?

Der Hauptteil gliedert sich in eine detaillierte Charakter- und Beziehungsanalyse beider Kurzgeschichten, gefolgt von einem direkten Vergleich ihrer Motive und Schicksale.

Welche Schlüsselwörter charakterisieren die Untersuchung?

Die Analyse wird besonders durch Begriffe wie Paralyse, Stagnation, emotionale Isolation und die Suche nach einem Ausweg aus gesellschaftlichen und familiären Fesseln geprägt.

Inwiefern spielt der Tod eine Rolle für die Protagonisten?

In "Eveline" fungiert das Versprechen an die verstorbene Mutter als Hemmschuh, während in "A Painful Case" der Tod von Mrs. Sinico Mr. Duffy erst schmerzhaft vor Augen führt, welche Chance auf ein gemeinsames Leben er versäumt hat.

Warum können die Protagonisten letztlich nicht aus ihrem Leben fliehen?

Beide Charaktere sind in ihren Mustern gefangen: Eveline durch ein falsches Pflichtgefühl und Mangel an Stärke, Mr. Duffy durch seine rigide Routine und seine Unfähigkeit, sich emotional für einen anderen Menschen zu öffnen.

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Details

Title
Astonied in Dublin: An Analogy of the Relationships in James Joyce's Dubliners "Eveline" and "A Painful Case"
College
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
Author
Julia Hermans (Author)
Publication Year
2010
Pages
16
Catalog Number
V167025
ISBN (eBook)
9783640833900
ISBN (Book)
9783640834013
Language
German
Tags
James Joyce Vergleich Dubliners
Product Safety
GRIN Publishing GmbH
Quote paper
Julia Hermans (Author), 2010, Astonied in Dublin: An Analogy of the Relationships in James Joyce's Dubliners "Eveline" and "A Painful Case", Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/167025
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