Category Archives: Dubliners

Shut Your Eyes and See

In rereading Ulysses, I recently reviewed the passage where Mr. Bloom helps a “blind stripling” cross the street, and Bloom’s reflections remind me how central sense perception is to Joyce’s work.

In this post, I look at a few places where sense perception is important to Ulysses before turning to Joyce’s treatment of the senses in Finnegans Wake.

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Dubliners: “Two Gallants” and Finnegans Wake

James Joyce had a devil of a time getting Dubliners published. Begun in 1904, the collection would not see the light of day until 1914. The delay was caused largely by objections from publishers and printers: objections to certain words (especially a handful of instances of the word “bloody”), to an insulting reference to Queen Victoria, and even to whole stories — among these is “Two Gallants.”

This post briefly looks at “Two Gallants,” explores why Joyce thought it crucial to Dubliners, and suggests the story speaks to themes that are treated more elaborately in Finnegans Wake.

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