Friday, October 25, 2019
The Erotic in Joyces A Painful Case Essay -- Painful
The Erotic in Joyce's A Painful Case     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   The characters whom  inhabit Joyce's world in "Dubliners," often have, as Harvard Literature  Professor Fischer stated in lecture, a "limited way" of thinking about and  understanding themselves and the world around them. Such "determinism," however,  operates not on a broad cultural scale, but works in smaller, more local, more  interior and more idiosyncratic ways. That is, the forces which govern Joyce's  characters are not necessarily cultural or socioeconomic in nature, but rather,  as Prof. Fischer stated, are "tiny," and work on a more intimate level. In any  case, as a result of such "forces", these stories often tend to be about  something, as Prof. Fischer said, that doesn't happen, about the "romance of  yearning and self-disappointment." Joyce's story "A Painful Case" is a perfect  example of a story about something that doesn't happen, and more specifically,  about "the romance of yearning." It is through such yearning, however, and the  various "erotic" for   ms that such yearning takes, that Joyce's characters are  able to transcend the "forces" which govern their lives. In "A Painful Case" the  erotic takes on three separate forms: mental, physical, and what I call,  "auditory." Although all three play a role in the story, it is only through  "auditory" eroticism that Joyce's protagonist, Mr. Duffy, comes to experience a  moment of "self-transcendence."      Ã       While "auditory" eroticism may serve, in the end, as the conduit for Duffy's  self-transformation, initially it is "mental" eroticism that brings together Mr.  Duffy and Mrs. Sinico. Joyce writes, "Little by little he (Duffy) entangled his  thoughts with hers. He lent her books, provided her with ideas, shared...              ...llowed to shine  in full poetic fervor and "reality," although Joyce attempts to escape it, seeps  back in through his words and metaphors.      Ã       Works Cited and Consulted     Bidwell, Bruce and Linda Heffer. The Joycean Way: A Topographic Guide to  Dubliners and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Johns Hopkins: Baltimore,  1981.      Gifford, Don. Joyce Annotated: Notes for Dubliners and A Portrait of the  Artist as a Young Man. University of California: Berkeley, 1982.      Joyce, James. Dubliners. Penguin Books: New York, 1975.      Peake, C.H. James Joyce: The Citizen and the Artist. Stanford University:  Stanford, 1977.      Tindall, William York. A Reader's Guide to James Joyce. Noonday Press: New  York, 1959.      Walzl, Florence L. "Dubliners." A Companion Study to James Joyce. Ed. Zack  Bowen and James F. Carens. Greenwood Press: London, 1984     Ã                        
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