The main features of James Joyce’s work


My own impressions and main characters of the story


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2.2 My own impressions and main characters of the story: She believes she has a right to happiness, too — that is, until she stands on the shore and confronts the reality of the journey on which she is about to embark. Then fear and guilt (about abandoning her father and her younger siblings) overwhelm her, and she stays rather than goes. Though it is as old and dusty as her father's house ("She looked round the room, reviewing all its familiar objects which she had dusted once a week for so many years, wondering where on earth all the dust came from"), Dublin is at least familiar, and Eveline is a fearful young woman, obsessed with thoughts of wild Patagonians and remembered ghost stories. "He rushed beyond the barrier and called to her to follow," the tale concludes. "He was shouted at to go on but he still called to her. She set her white face to him, passive, like a helpless animal. Her eyes gave him no sign of love or farewell or recognition." Though this is not certain, it seems unlikely that Eveline will ever leave home now. Frank seems to have been her last, best chance. Usually, people, who are in love, do not care about what their families, and other people might think about them. They miss eachother when they are separated. All they want is being together. But in James Joyce’s short story Eveline the protagonist behaves very differently. Why does she not leave with her boyfriend Frank when there seems to be nothing that holds her back? There is a plausible explanation. Eveline is not in love with Frank, she only sees him as a chance to escape from her hard life. She only hopes for a better life, but does not trust Frank. Moreover, she never mentions that she loves him, and finally she decides not to go with him.

Eveline hopes she will have a better, more comfortable life with Frank in Buenos Ayres. She thinks that the life in another country will be totally different from her old life in Dublin, where she lives with her father, who threatens her sometimes, and two younger siblings, she has to take care for. Moreover she hopes, that when she is married with Frank, other people will have more respect for her. Whereas in her salesjob in Dublin she is little respected. Eveline hopes that she will not live the same pittyful life her mother did, when she leaves Ireland. To escape the destiny of a hard life, she wants to use Frank. This is shown by the sentences: “Frank would save her. He would give her life, perhaps love, too.” ( Joyce 72) The word “perhaps” clearly indicates that she is not in love at the moment of the utterance, but that she hopes to learn to love Frank someday. Eveline wants to leave with Frank, because she wants to enjoy a better life in Buenos Ayres, not because she loves him.
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Eveline James Joyce Short Summary
According to Joyce, “There is no more miserable human being than one in whom nothing is habitual but indecision “(33). In this short story, James tells a tale of Eveline who happens to be an unfortunate individual.

She is depicted as an anxious young woman, scared, timid and terrified by what is happening in her life such as her fathers’ brutality and violent nature towards her, her mothers and brothers death and poverty status of her old father. Joyce showed Eveline as a frightened woman, indecisive and who is so much into her past as opposed to her future.

Eveline is thinking widely as she sits besides a window. She thinks of her family, neighbors, and how years back, they used to play in the open fields where now stand houses and other buildings. She is a nineteen-year-old woman and her mother died. Eveline is planning to escape Ireland with her boyfriend Frank.

She is a hardworking woman both at the store and at home. She takes cares of her family members, her father, and her two young siblings. She gives all her salary to the family despite the fact that her father constantly accuses her as being spendthrift (Nicole 2011).

Eveline Analysis
Characters in Eveline by Joyce
James Joyce wrote the story of Eveline in 1914. Eveline is the title of the main character in the short story and it shows how she was affected by feminism during her life time. Joyce states that, “the feminist issues affecting Eveline are in her relationship with her boyfriend Frank, relatives, duties, obligations, and societal expectations” (20). She has embodied the importance of the ‘feminine’ in patriarchy.

She has an open opportunity to escape but she does not escape. Eventually, at the end of the story she fails to leave and sentences herself to life as a ‘housekeeper’ (Nicole 2011). She loves her father despite his violent nature against her (Vulgen 2006). She clings onto the best memories of her father, saying, “Sometimes he could be very nice (Joyce 5),” She witnessed her fathers brutality to her brothers when he would “hunt them in out of the field with his blackthorn stick (Joyce 4).”Eveline has started feeling “herself in danger of her father’s violence (Joyce 4).” Ironically, her father has “begun to threaten her and say what he’d do to her only for her dead mother’s sake (Joyce 5)”.

The story of Eveline revolves around the theme of escape where she dreams of a new and better life but her past, which she is clinging so much to, is impeding her. She would like the kind of treatment with respect anywhere she went and when planning her future, she would like to explore life with Frank. Whenever she is in a moment of terror, she realizes that escaping is the only option to make a new home elsewhere.

She is indecisive between the decision of leaving to a new home and the idea of having to leave behind all the familiar things she never thought she would separate from such as leaving his old and sick father. According to Vulgen, “Eveline argues that she gets all she wants from her present home such as obtaining food and shelter and being in company of all those people she has known in her entire life”( 2006). However, in the end, Eveline finds that she is not able to go (Vulgen 2006).

The thought of her trying to escape in is because of the numerous challenges she has to go through. Joyce James has succeeded in portraying her as the mother figure in her home by keeping the family intact just as her mother did. Eveline’s father withholds her payment from work and is always unfair towards her, which makes Eveline desire to escape. Eveline’s difficult family life is a metaphor representing Ireland (Nicole 2011).

Themes in Eveline by Joyce
Eveline goes through the normal stages of life. The author of the book, Joyce, “gives us a narration of the deep-rooted poverty and pressure Evelines’ life. Her family responsibilities and issues at the height of poverty weigh heavily on the young woman; her financial difficulties are far much worse than the three boy’s narrators in the previous stories are” (2009). She finds herself in between an undesirable situation of having to take care of her siblings and her abusive father (Vulgen 2006).

The book also touches on another important theme of paralysis, which inhibits Eveline from moving forward. Eveline fails to take the all-important decision that would free her from the chains of oppression entangling her life. Joyce states, “Eveline does not want to leave Ireland and she sees her lover, Frank, as a possible source of danger, as she compares him to his violent father. Her boyfriend, Frank was pulling her closer to them and drowned her” (34).

However, her paralysis will eventually cost her. Eveline faces a very certain and miserable future which is more or less similar to her dead mother’s lonely and gloomy life. The future is uncertain to Eveline but very hopeful, she ought to embrace the future and break the chain of problems in her family. Conclusion
A closer look at Joyce’s ‘Eveline’, at a feminist angle, shows the oppression and struggle of women in the twentieth century Dublin set-up as clearly outlined in the story through the relationship of Eveline with her lover, her obligations as a young unmarried woman, societal expectations of her and most importantly, her relationship with her family.The story ‘Eveline’, by James Joyce, talks about a young girl who faced with a choice between whether to stay in Dublin with her family or leave with her boyfriend for a new life in Buenos Aires, up to the last minutes to stay behind.

The story is divided into three sections: in the first section, Joyce introduced the reader to Eveline, her house, her environment and her childhood memories. In the second section, we meet Frank. Frank invites Eveline to follow him and make a new life in Buenos Aires. This is the central conflict of the plot. In the third section, Eveline deals with her interior conflict when it comes to making a decision and stay in Dolin with her family which is the conclusion of the story. Joyce shows us everything from Eveline’s point of view/ perspective by a third person narrator, giving the reader free access to Eveline’s thoughts through all her story. The objective description of facts is mingled with the protagonist’s impressions.

Eveline is a round character whose thought process changes as the story develops through the beginning, middle, and end of the narrative. The reader gets to know the other characters from Eveline’s point of view, her father in particular. The father is an abusive figure. Eveline remembers how he used to interrupt her childhood plays with her brothers, under the threat of his stick. Eveline’s father as a round character represents violence, irrationality, that pure instinct which can only be managed with kindness and understanding, not using rationality. He was violent and addicted to alcohol, but he was the man of the house. Another male character is the sailor Frank who is presented in clear opposition to Eveline’s father. While the father represents the harsh and unsatisfactory everyday reality that Eveline is forced to live, Frank is associated with the idea of freedom, of a new life, of economic independence. The most influential character (although she is dead) is Eveline’s mother: she is mentioned several times throughout the story, but in the third section, when Eveline is going to make a decision, she becomes crucial. Her mother represents what Eveline could become if she decides to stay in Dublin and to continue to suffer the domestic abuse of her father.When Joyce wrote that Eveline “sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue” we know the objective fact that Eveline was watching out the window, but the same quotation may have another symbolic and psychological meaning: Eveline was alone, separated by the window from the outside world. Even the dusty curtains and the desolated street give us a clue about Eveline’s mood/ state of mind, the dust of the curtains is mentioned twice in the story as an indication of the neglect of her responsibility to keep house clean, as well as the hard work of her domestic life. The main conflict in the story is the struggle between Eveline and herself, along the story she struggles whether to stay in Dublin with her family or leave with her boyfriend for a new life in Buenos Aires, she made a promise to her mother that she will take care of the house as well as thinking of her old father. In the end she does not leave. Instead she decided to stay in Dublin and leave behind her beloved alone.

Joyce in his work captured his writing beautifully by using some figure of speech, at the very beginning of the story he uses ‘flashbacks’: Eveline sits at the window bringing back memories happened in her childhood and how they were playing with friends of the old street. On the end of the story the author resembles Eveline’s facial expression to that of an animal: ”She set her white face to him, passive, like a helpless animal. Her eyes gave him no sign of love or farewell or recognition”.

The author in his story depicts the difficult life of women in a male dominant society. Eveline as a woman lives in that time she has no right to make her decisions and afraid of what people may say about her. Also her relationship with her father as well as her beloved Frank is a clear example of how she is a fear and weak woman. Another message the author gives in the story is the idea of escape oppression since Eveline suffers from her abusive father and her heavy responsibilities towards her family. In an early age she dreamed in a new life and new opportunities to make her life better than her poor mother.In the short story "Eveline" by James Joyce, the title character Eveline is fearful of making a change in her life by moving with her boyfriend Frank from her homeland of Ireland and making a life with him in Buenos Ayres. Joyce illustrates that one of our most inherent qualities as humans and one that Eveline displays is that we are resistant to change. Through Eveline's relationships with her father, Frank and various peripheral relationships, Joyce demonstrates to us how Eveline has come to have certain beliefs about change.

There is overwhelming evidence in Eveline's life that change is good, yet she continues to resist it. Eveline saw her mother make many common sacrifices and give up her freedom of choice in everyday…show more content…
He does not want a worldly man such as Frank having any influence on his daughter. He believes that if Eveline did become serious with Frank he, as her father, would become a lower priority in Eveline's life. She would most certainly leave the house and quite possibly move far away, which would be yet another change the old man would have to endure.

Other factors lead to Eveline being fearful of change. Not only change in commitments but change in physical surroundings are things she does not embrace, though she has been surrounded by change most of her life; when she was a child, she would play in the field with the neighbor children every evening, until it was built upon. She has also experienced change in the form of death; childhood friends, her brother and her mother - all are dead. Death is not a positive representation of change to be sure. As Evelyn ponders change, she comes to the realization that the physical surroundings of her everyday life would no longer be there. The furnishings, the pictures, the curtains, even the dust would be distant memories! Things she has unknowingly drawn comfort from her entire life would not be there to comfort her; they would be gone. Change may not be something she wants.

All of these realizations about change are due to Eveline considering the biggest change in her life: the change she is most fearful about, moving away from Ireland to be with Frank in Buenos
Already she is starting to change. She is horrified by her own part in Eva 's story. She feels full of guilt for her jealous actions and blames herself as "really responsible". She is very perspective and is becoming more mature. Her behaviour contrasts with her parents; her social conscience has been awakened and she is aware of her responsibilities
inconsistency in her beliefs. Majorly, nearing the end of her life, she begins to regret all her deeds of which
The Changeable nature of life affects us all somehow. Whether it be moving to a new city, having children, or losing people that we love, it can affect people in many different ways. For example, in the novel, the main character
1. Which accounting method best reflects the economic reality? Put another way, which accounting numbers – the GAAP or non-GAAP numbers best reflects economic reality? [10 points]
“How many things have to happen to you,” Robert Frost Writes, “before something occurs to you?” A person wakes up every morning to the same gray walls and eats the same flavorless slop. Seeing no changes they seem to ask themselves if life is worth living. They are unhappy but are afraid of new environments and unknown areas. Wishing things can go back to when their worries were as simple as trying to memorize the multiplication tables. Although it is written that change is in every person’s destiny, there are several reasons a person might or might not seek out change. For instance, a person’s environment or way of living can be one of the hardest things to change. Living in the projects, bills to pay and people to obey are a few reasons many steer away from change. Secondly unexpected life events like suddenly having to become a parent and learning how to raise a baby while trying to balance sudden deaths that may occur. Thirdly, discovering a person’s true emotions for another human being can create what I like to call a domino effect. Whether you consider the environment to be the atmosphere around you or the place to which a person calls home, one thing is certain that in any environment a person must adjust in order to survive, and through any adjustments comes change.
Change is something that happens to everyone, and it can shape one’s future. Whether it be one personally adjusting their ethics, location, or habits, or someone who is close modifying themselves in a similar way, everyone experiences some change. This change occurs everywhere and throughout one’s daily life and it can create a lasting impact. In The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver, there are many changes that the Price family experiences. At the start of the book this change relies on the influence of a change in location has on the family, but as the book progresses this change reflects more on the change of the values that each woman of the family faces. Throughout the novel, the idea that change can force one to adjust their
“I had been counting on Mom and Dad to get us out, but I now knew I had to do it on my own” (p. 221). Jeannette’s realization demonstrates that now she has seen things that have been present the entire such as the harshness the Walls’ live in. That has been present since the beginning of them.
Both Elizabeth and Owen throughout the book, learn to try to make life in Elsewhere worth it. They move on and grow up from what happened on Earth and apply what they have learned in that life to their new one. At first, Elizabeth is finding it hard to move on and always goes to the observation decks. By the end, you can see how she learned to just make the most of it, and she got a life. “...good start to adopt a dog” (Zevin, 169). This is when in the book Owen decides to move on from Emily back home, and start by getting a dog. This is a big step, as this is when he meets Elizabeth. In my personal life, I always try to make every action and day worth living. I end up making goals and try to complete them in a certain amount of time.”The sweater cost $150” (Zevin, 25). A big thing that Elizabeth did on Earth was that she spent 150 dollars of her own money on her dad’s birthday present and was determined to somehow give it to her dad. She then does not move on from this and tries to make contact to people on Earth. She then finds to be a bad decision, which is when this lesson comes through into the text. I can relate to this concept, as when I say or do something that I regret, I make sure that I do not say or do anything of the sort
It is common for people to fear change. Most people although afraid will accept the changes and adapt to it. Others will control that change unwilling to adhere to the new and unfamiliar way of things. Many are stuck in the past, in the traditions that guide their lives. Emily Grierson is a product of the Old South, rich in traditions and set in her ways. The New south means change; traditions are lost and replaced with new customs. Even though afraid of change Emily will control the changes in her life, the loss of her father, the respect of the town, and even the reality of her own life in “A Rose for Emily” by Faulkner.Throughout the story there are several aspects of the Protagonist’s character that play a major role in the shaping of her future. During her childhood she witnessed. Marianne’s display of responsibility is not consistent, and is very different than he sister’s; unlike Elinor, Marianne lives aWith the experience of being ignored, betrayed, and deprived, she becomes more afraid of loss and danger, but longs even more to have something to hold. dear and belong to. When she gets into the convent school she finds temporary safety, being sheltered from the dangerous and unpredictable "outside", but her stepfather eventually brings her out into the Eveline loves Frank but his love proves not enough to free her from the cage of a lonely life she has become trapped in. Miserably alone, Eveline finds herself after the passing of her mother and living with a controlling alcoholic father.: “At the center of each story is the conscious decision-making process, the pros and cons of running away, the security of the hearth against the freedom of escape” (Putzel 5). Whether it is the promise she made her mother to take care of the family or her father that stops her from leaving, Eveline makes her choices based on the feelings and thoughts of others. After reading “Eveline” by James Joyce it is clear that Eveline Hill is longing for a new life, one that brings her face to face with adulthood struggles, leaving her literally stuck within her mind and dark surroundings. In James Joyce’s “Eveline”, Eveline remains in Dublin to care for her father, to take care of the house and the kids, and she realized she was already comfortable in her current home. Eveline has lived in Dublin her whole life in Dublin and has seen her siblings either leave home or pass away through time. Yet she remains in the house that she grew up in, experienced the changes in environment, changes in time, and the change in the people around her. She has seen her mother pass away, her father grow older and crueler. She has witnessed the field “in which they used to play every evening with other people’s children” be destroyed by a man from Belfast who “bought the field and built houses in it – not like their little brown houses but James Joyce is known for his experimental use of language and exploration of new literary methods, including interior monologue, use of a complex network of symbolic parallels, and invented words, puns, and allusions in his novels, especially Ulysses (1922) and Finnegans Wake (1939). The purpose of Ulysses was to explore the stream of consciousness. Joyce wanted to use this technique to show how the tasks of everyday life could be beautiful. He thought that further analyzing how the mind reacted and spoke to these things would provide a better sense of humanity. James Joyce's most famous works were Finnegan's Wake, Ulysses, and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. All of his work centers around Irish culture and life. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is an autobiography of Joyce's life. James Joyce was one of the most significant writers of the 20th-century. He is most well known for his unique writing styles in which he tries to capture how the mind thinks in word. He focused heavily on writing about the stream of consciousness and how everyday tasks were detailed pieces of art. Joyce was also known for combining words or phrases to make new words, especially in his novel Finnegan's Wake.
On February 2, 1882, James Joyce was born in Dublin, Ireland. Joyce was an Irish poet and author primarily known for his unique writing style. He wrote of the grandeur of everyday life and attempted to mimic how thought sounded through a stream of consciousness. Many of his works were not well-received at first, and he tried more than twenty times to get some of his literature published. Joyce grew up in a middle-class family and spent his early years studying in a Jesuit boarding school. His family struggled to make ends meet due to his father's drinking and other misfortunes. When Joyce's parents could no longer afford the prestigious boarding school, they brought him home. Joyce attempted to educate himself over the next few years. In 1893, Joyce returned to formal studies at the Belvedere College, a Jesuit grammar school. He attended University College in Dublin, where he continued to study writing and language. He also took part in writing for the Literary and Historical Society. James Joyce was known for his unique writing style. Joyce's writing style reflected both his love of languages as well as his desire to express precisely how thoughts sounded. Though his works embodied an Irish motif, Joyce's literary technique changed from one work to another. He often played with diction, monologues, and soliloquies. The use of complex ideas and innovative symbolism was also a common technique. Joyce often used Irish slang in many of his works but also employed plenty of puns, allegories, and euphemisms to give his characters a more modern and realistic feel. Joyce wrote four fictional works set in Ireland: Dubliners, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Ulysses, and Finnegan's Wake. James Joyce's books were uniquely written and challenged literary standards. Dubliners was Joyce's first published novel. The book is a collection of fifteen different stories set against Dublin's Irish middle-class life. Irish nationalism is a common theme throughout the stories. Joyce had supported Ireland's separation and independence from Great Britain. Joyce depicted his love for Ireland and his growing frustrations with regressing nationalism throughout the fifteen stories. He focused on utilizing epiphanies and using protagonists of various ages. Dubliners was first published in 1914. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

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