The Curve of an Emotion: A Study of Change in the Portrayal of Children and Childhood in the Literature of James Joyce
Abstract
Literary theorists and social historians consider fictional texts to be important for the
study of children and childhood. James Joyce’s fiction is considered important for
understanding Irish childhoods, and Joyce’s portrayal of childhood is often deemed
unchanging within the major themes until the distinction between adults and children
breaks down in Finnegans Wake. However, no extended studies of children or
childhood in Joyce’s fiction exist, and while Joyce scholars generally consider the
literary child in Joyce’s fiction to be an historical artefact within Joycean aesthetics,
there exists only a limited scholarly engagement with the topic after A Portrait of the
Artist as a Young Man. This thesis seeks to bridge this gap by exploring the depiction
of children and childhood in all of Joyce’s major works of fiction up until Finnegans
Wake.
This thesis is structured chronologically, beginning with Dubliners and finishing
with Ulysses. The methodology used is a dialectical discussion between Joyce’s texts
and the social historical account. By applying this approach, each of Joyce’s texts has
presented unique theoretical problems for the study of children and childhood.
Accordingly, an eclectic approach is employed drawing from theoretical models of
the child that span from classical antiquity to contemporary Marxist perspectives.
Thus, the close readings, each presented as stand–alone articles, serve to demonstrate
that the topic of children and childhood is treated uniquely by Joyce in each work of
fiction before Finnegans Wake.
These readings work towards a new way of viewing childhood in Joyce’s fiction
by providing evidence of an uninterrupted trajectory of change that informs the
major themes. However, this does not gesture towards radical change. Rather, it is
suggested that it is more useful to consider change as following a curve of revised
sensibility that reaches a vertex in Ulysses. Accordingly, it is argued that even with the
wide arch of interpretational possibilities discussed in this thesis, the literary child in
Ulysses undermines, but does not radically break free from, adult perspectives.
Parts of work
1. Ryan, Barry. “James Joyce’s ‘The Sisters’: Implied Pederasty and Interpreting the
Inexpressible.” Boyhood Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, vol. 13, no. 1, 2020,
pp. 92-109. 2. Ryan, Barry. “Pregnancy and Abjection in James Joyce’s ‘The Dead’.” Nordic Irish
Studies, vol. 1, no. 1, 2015, pp. 37-53. 3. Ryan, Barry. “‘Arisen from the Grave of Boyhood’? Nostalgia and Misopaedia in
James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.” Accepted for publication
in Nordic Irish Studies. 4. Ryan, Barry. “The Emerging Affective Child in James Joyce’s Exiles.” Accepted for
publication in Papers on Joyce. 5. Ryan, Barry. “Interpreting the Lives of Working Children in James Joyce’s Ulysses.”
Accepted for publication in Engaging with Work in English Studies: An Issue-based
Approach.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Humanities
Institution
Department of Languages and Literatures ; Institutionen för språk och litteraturer
Disputation
Fredagen den 26 mars 2021, kl. 13:15, Sal C350, Renströmsgatan 6, Göteborg.
Date of defence
2021-03-26
barry.ryan@sprak.gu.se
Other description
The child has existed on the margins of Western philosophical inquiry since classical antiquity,
yet childhood has been central to Western philosophical concerns. The aim of critical
childhood scholarship is to historicize this dissonance by examining the child that is believed
to exist, the childhoods that children are expected to live, and the experiences of children performing
childhood. As is the case with other marginalised voices, fictional texts are considered
important sources for analysis.
In recent decades the institutional abuse of children in Ireland has been a frequent feature of
public discourse. However, the study of children and childhood in Ireland is often challenging
due to the scarcity of primary sources. Accordingly, fictional texts are considered important for
understanding adult beliefs about children and childhood in Ireland, and for understanding
how it felt for children to live in the historical moment. James Joyce is considered important for
understanding children and childhood in an Irish context, and Joyce’s portrayal of childhood
is often considered unchanging within the major themes. Yet, this thesis is the first extended
exploration of the portrayal of children and childhood in Joyce’s fiction.
This thesis explores the portrayal of children and childhood in all of Joyce’s major works of
fiction up until the distinction between adults and children breaks down in Finnegans Wake.
Each work of fiction is treated independently, and the results are presented as a portfolio of
articles organised chronologically. In contrast to common understandings of childhood in
Joyce, this thesis demonstrates that Joyce’s portrayal of children and childhood is consistently
revised throughout his oeuvre. Thus, it is useful to consider these changes as following a curve
of revision that reaches a vertex in Ulysses.
Date
2021-02-09Author
Ryan, Barry
Keywords
Irish Catholic childhoods
alienation
distorted adult perceptions
sexual boundary
nostalgia
misopaedia
nexus
historicization
reciprocation
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-186-2 (print)
978-91-8009-187-9 (pdf)
Language
eng