Criticism > Short Story Criticism > The Dead, James Joyce - William J. Handy (essay date 1971)

The Dead, James Joyce - William J. Handy (essay date 1971)

William J. Handy (essay date 1971)

SOURCE: "Joyce's The Dead,'" in Modern Fiction: A Formalist Approach, Southern Illinois University Press, 1971, pp. 29-61.

[In the following excerpt, Handy examines the thematic nature of "The Dead, " particularly its theme of spiritual death.]

"The Dead" is certainly one of the masterpieces in the Joyce canon. Its themes, recognizably present in the later works, are embodied in a much more direct manner of presentation: the theme of spiritual death, of spiritual rebirth, and the theme of the freedom of the human spirit as a necessary condition for living and loving. It would be folly for the critic of whatever persuasion not to grant that a sound reading of "The Dead" is an obvious prerequisite to the reading of Joyce's later works. I would like to examine some scenes and episodes from the first half of the story which is intended to suggest the way Joyce has built his meanings to a climactic embodiment...

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