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Dubliners
James Joyce
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Description for Dubliners
Paperback. .
This group of fifteen brief narratives connected by a place and a time, the city of Dublin at the beginning of the twentieth century, was written when James Joyce was a precocious young graduate of University College. With great subtlety and artistic restraint, Joyce suggests what lies beneath the pieties of Dublin society and its surface drive for respectability, suggesting the difficulties and despairs that were being endured on a daily basis in homes, pubs, streets, and offices of the city: underemployment, domestic violence, alcoholism, poverty, hunger, emotional and sexual repression. No writer ever took more seriously the details, history, ... Read more
This group of fifteen brief narratives connected by a place and a time, the city of Dublin at the beginning of the twentieth century, was written when James Joyce was a precocious young graduate of University College. With great subtlety and artistic restraint, Joyce suggests what lies beneath the pieties of Dublin society and its surface drive for respectability, suggesting the difficulties and despairs that were being endured on a daily basis in homes, pubs, streets, and offices of the city: underemployment, domestic violence, alcoholism, poverty, hunger, emotional and sexual repression. No writer ever took more seriously the details, history, ... Read more
Product Details
Publisher
Broadview Press Ltd
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2016
Series
Broadview Editions
Condition
New
Number of Pages
300
Place of Publication
Peterborough, Canada
ISBN
9781554811229
SKU
V9781554811229
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 5 to 9 working days
Ref
99-2
About James Joyce
Keri Walsh is Assistant Professor of English at Fordham University, USA. She is the editor of The Letters of Sylvia Beach (Columbia University Press, 2010).
Reviews for Dubliners
Keri Walsh's Broadview edition of Dubliners will deepen and enliven any reader's experience of Joyce's book. Included here are extensive appendices of primary materials that contextualize Joyce's fictional world in terms of Ireland's social, cultural, religious, and economic history, and in terms of the book's troubled publication history, its early reception, and its place in literary history. Walsh's introductory essay ... Read more