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Examples Of Epiphany In The Dead By James Joyce

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In 1914, James Joyce published a collection of fifteen short stories entitled Dubliners, which depict with realistic detail the lives of middle-class Irish citizens. Throughout the tales, Joyce's use of the secular epiphany emerges as a key element. For instance, in the final short story of the Dubliners collection, "The Dead," the protagonist Gabriel experiences an epiphany in the denouement of the tale. Throughout the story, Joyce develops the interpersonal conflicts and the character of Gabriel simultaneously to facilitate this final epiphany; Gabriel's internal struggles mirror the external obstacles he faces, culminating in his realization that his preoccupation with image and class has hindered his ability to make connections with others. The story begins at the residence of Kate and Julia Morkan, two elderly sisters who host an annual dance and dinner on the Feast of the Epiphany. The sisters await the arrival of their favourite nephew, Gabriel Conroy, and his wife, Gretta. When …show more content…

At the beginning of the tale, he agonizes over the speech he will be giving later in the evening. He worries that the other guests "will think that he [is] airing his superior education" by quoting Robert Browning and that "he [will] fail with them …. His whole speech [will be] a mistake from first to last, an utter failure" (Joyce 1246). Gabriel fears humiliation and public disgrace, and "how he appears to other people engrosses [him]" (Walzl 24). As such, he is cross with Miss Ivors for trying "to make him ridiculous before people" (Joyce 1251). Molly Ivors may even be seen as Gabriel's foil (O Hehir 6). Gabriel strives to maintain what he considers his public image of a well-educated and respectable man and, thus, is dismissive of Miss Ivors whose vivacious and unapologetic manner so contrasts his own guarded and constructed personality. Like with Lily, Gabriel fails to form a connection with Molly

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