Learning Paths » 5B Interacting
James Joyce The Dead - Analysis
The Dead is the last of the fifteen short stories that arrange Joyce’s first book of fiction, Dubliners. The stories, which seem separate, are linked because they all represent the lives of different inhabitants of the same city, Dublin. The city and the portrayal of Irish culture are the main connections between the episodes.
Quite meaningful is the title: “the dead” is an adjective substantivized as it would be itself a character of the story. Indeed, in the episode, dead people are mentioned during the protagonist speech at the party and in the end, when the flashback about the young former lover of the protagonist’s wife is reported. The adjective reminds also to the main theme of most Joyce’s production, the paralysis of Irish people.
The whole story is related from the point of view of the main character, Gabriel Conroy, who appears only after the description of the setting: the annual dance and dinner party held by Kate and Julia Morkan and their young niece, Mary Jane Morkan.
The first characterization of Gabriel is leaded by his actions, his words (for example through the dialogue with Lily) his thoughts (for instance his consideration about Lily’s reaction), by hints about his civil status (he’s married), about his cultural condition (he knows poetry), and also by his physical appearance (he embodies the Irish features). His wife Gretta, instead, is characterized through Gabriel’s words.
Gabriel is a man of letters, for this reason can be considered a personal projection of Mr. Joyce.
Since the first paragraphs the reader can feel his sense of inadequacy reading about his inability to relate to servants like Lily, and knowing his uncertain thoughts on the talk the character is giving at the party. Joyce shows the human beings like they really are, presenting the reader antiheroes rather than heroes.
During his dance with Miss Ivors, he faces a number of questions about his nonexistent nationalist sympathies, which he doesn’t know how to answer appropriately. Gabriel’s unease ends in his intense night with Gretta and in the following reflection about his life. When, at the hotel, his wife confesses him that she was thinking of her first love, Gabriel becomes furious at her and himself, realizing that he has no claim on her. But finally he also experiences an inward change that makes him examine his own life and human life in general. After hearing that Michael Furey’s memory still lives, he recognizes the distinction between human and dead people doesn’t exist, leaving opened the possibility he will change attitude.