This collection of essays is a critical reexamination of Joyces famed book of short stories, Dubliners. Despite the multifaceted critical attention Dubliners has received since its publication more than a century ago, many readers and teachers of the stories still rely on and embrace old, outdated readings that invoke metaphors of paralysis and stagnation to understand the book. Challenging these canonical notions about mobility, paralysis, identity, and gender in Joyces work, the ten essays here suggest that Dubliners is full of incredible movement. By embracing this paradigm shift, current and future scholars can open themselves up to the possibility of seeing that movement, maybe even noticing it for the first time, can yield surprisingly fresh twenty-first-century readings.
Table of Contents
Introduction. Rethinking Dubliners: A Case for What Happens in Joyces Stories by Claire A. Culleton and Ellen Scheible
Chapter 2. The thin end of the wedge: How Things Start in Dubliners by Claire A. Culleton
Chapter 3. No There There: Place, Absence, and Negativity in A Painful Case
by Margot Norris
Chapter 4. A Sensation of Freedom and the Rejection of Possibility in
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