The Consequences of Responsibility in Dubliners

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The Consequences of Responsibility in Dubliners

James Joyce wrote a book of stories called Dubliners discussing different people’s lives in Dublin. In writing these stories, Joyce tries to portray in the characters a sense of sadness and pressure to do what is expected in society. When he wrote the book it was during a rough time in Dublin. Therefore, the issues that he discusses in the different stories show how the lives of the people were not as happy as they all wished. In the stories “Eveline,” “The Boarding House,” and “The Dead,” each one of the characters find some form of light at the end of the story which gives them a new start on their lives. “Eveline” is a story about a girl who wants to escape from her life at home and marry a man that loves her. However, she is torn between her promise to her mother to stay in this miserable place and her fiancé that wants to take her away from it all and give her a better life. With the story “The Boarding House,” Bob Doran has to figure out if he is ready to take the responsibility of marrying a girl and saving his good status. The final story, “The Dead,” is about a husband and wife trying to figure out their lives. The husband, Gabriel, has to accept that the woman he has been in love with is really not who he thought she was, and the wife Gretta finally takes the responsibility to tell her husband about her one and only love and let her sadness end. In Dubliners, when the characters take on responsibility, the consequences are dark.

In the story “Eveline,” the obligations that Eveline has to many people in her life are portrayed as dark and depressing. Eveline worries about breaking her promise to her mother about staying home, since if she marri...

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...her husband she was able to close that part in her life and move on.

These themes of these three stories are important because it shows the type of lives and people that the characters had in Dublin. At the end of each story, each character finds his or her own “light at the end of the tunnel,” which allowed them to try and start a new life with more change. It is important that each character is able to overcome the responsibilities and make it better in the end. Each person today still faces their own responsibility that can either be bad or good, which makes the characters relatable in that no one’s life is perfect. James Joyce wrote this book in a time when the people of Dublin were trying to re-build after the famine, and if the readers can find the positive somewhere during that time period that it shows the personal strength in each character.

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