Suspicious Readings of Joyce's Dubliners

Couverture
University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003 - 279 pages

Because the stories in James Joyce's Dubliners seem to function as models of fiction, they are able to stand in for fiction in general in their ability to make the operation of texts explicit and visible. Joyce's stories do this by provoking skepticism in the face of their storytelling. Their narrative unreliabilities--produced by strange gaps, omitted scenes, and misleading narrative prompts--arouse suspicion and oblige the reader to distrust how and why the story is told.

As a result, one is prompted to look into what is concealed, omitted, or left unspoken, a quest that often produces interpretations in conflict with what the narrative surface suggests about characters and events. Margot Norris's strategy in her analysis of the stories in Dubliners is to refuse to take the narrative voice for granted and to assume that every authorial decision to include or exclude, or to represent in a particular way, may be read as motivated. Suspicious Readings of Joyce's Dubliners examines the text for counterindictions and draws on the social context of the writing in order to offer readings from diverse theoretical perspectives.

Suspicious Readings of Joyce's Dubliners devotes a chapter to each of the fifteen stories in Dubliners and shows how each confronts the reader with an interpretive challenge and an intellectual adventure. Its readings of "An Encounter," "Two Gallants," "A Painful Case," "A Mother," "The Boarding House," and "Grace" reconceive the stories in wholly novel ways--ways that reveal Joyce's writing to be even more brilliant, more exciting, and more seriously attuned to moral and political issues than we had thought.

 

Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

The Gnomon of the Book The Sisters
16
A Walk on the Wilde Side An Encounter
30
Blind Streets and Seeing Houses Araby
45
The Perils of Eveline
55
Masculinity Games in After the Race
68
Gambling with Gambles in Two Gallants
80
Narrative Bread Pudding The Boarding House
93
Men Under a Cloud in A Little Cloud
107
Shocking the Reader in A Painful Case
144
Genres in Dispute Ivy Day in the Committee Room
158
Critical Judgment and Gender Prejudice in A Mother
171
Setting Critical Accounts Aright in Grace
183
The Politics of Gender and Art in The Dead
202
Notes
223
Works Cited
251
Index
261

Farrington the Scrivener Revisited Counterparts
108
Narration Under the Blindfold in Clay
126
Acknowledgments
267
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À propos de l'auteur (2003)

Margot Norris is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Irvine. She is author of Writing War in the Twentieth Century, Joyce's Web: The Social Unraveling of Modernism, and other books.

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