The Effects Of Epiphany In James Joyce's Dubliners

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Many people are familiar with the “light bulb moment”- the moment when one suddenly understands and everything becomes clearer. From a more technical and literary standpoint, that moment could be referred to as an epiphany. James Joyce, in his manuscript of Stephen Hero, defines an epiphany as “a sudden spiritual manifestation.” In addition, Joyce used epiphanies liberally throughout his writing of Dubliners. The epiphanies, which can be found in each short story, they are essential in shaping Joyce’s stories. Because epiphanies were used so often throughout Dubliners, their effects on the protagonists can be compared and contrasted between stories. One such is example is “The Dead” and “A Painful Case.” Though the epiphanies experienced …show more content…

Gabriel begins to think about his own relationship with Greta and in doing so, he realizes that Greta would have been better off with a man who truly loved her. At the end of the Dead, the narrator describes Gabriel as watching her sleep, “as though he and she had never lived together as man and wife,” (Joyce, 240). This moment, in comparison to the seemingly endless party chatter throughout the rest of the story, plays a significant role in the text. In “A Painful Case,” Mr. Duffy experiences his own epiphany. Seeing Mrs. Sinico’s death listed in the newspaper allows Mr. Duffy to realize two things. The first is that he is responsible for her death because he pushed her away and left her in a very lonely situation. This realization causes him to ask, “what else he could have done.” He feels guilty but is able to admit that, “he had done what seemed to him best,” (Joyce, 128). The second thing he realizes is that because he pushed away the only person he ever really loved, he is now utterly …show more content…

Duffy’s controlling nature is seen not in his relationships, the way he lives his life makes it clear that he too likes to be in control. Mr. Duffy lives alone and plainly. He has no friends or family and decorates his house sparsely. A “white-shaded lamp” is reported to be the “sole ornament of the mantelpiece,” while the walls are also empty and bare (Joyce, 118). Everyday Mr. Duffy follows the same schedule. Allowing his relationship with Mrs. Sinico to continue would mean accepting a reduction in the amount of the control he has over his own life. Therefore, he pushes Mrs. Sinico out of his life and proves that having control is more important to him than being in relation with

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