Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2021
Abstract
“Hope, Hunger, and Spiritual Liberation in Joyce’s Dubliners” challenges the consensus that Dubliners is best understood as an expression of paralysis or hopelessness. Seen through Ernst Bloch’s critical theory, hope emerges as a forward-looking process in Joyce’s stories, one wary of apotheosis and tied to historical conditions such as hunger. What emerges is a new way of regarding the political operation of Joyce’s texts as adaptive, anticipatory, and unfolding. While Joyce never underestimates the material and political resistances to hope posed by the poverty and hunger that his characters suffer under colonialism and capitalism—indeed, his texts invite readers to scrutinize these conditions—this essay shows that Dubliners, while not directed toward a specific political goal, is fundamentally open to what Bloch calls “real possibility,” or to social and political futures that are possible given prevailing and maturing material conditions but which cannot necessarily be named or known in advance.
Identifier
85128597811 (Scopus)
DOI
10.1353/jjq.2021.0036
Publisher
University of Tulsa
ISSN
00214183
Repository Citation
Rando, D. (2021). Hope, hunger, and spiritual liberation in Joyce's Dubliners. James Joyce Quarterly, 59(1), 53-73. http://doi.org/10.1353/jjq.2021.0036
Publication Information
James Joyce Quarterly