In exploring everyday life and its intersections with death, this enduring collection of stories offers a naturalistic depiction of the working class in early twentieth-century Dublin. Joyce masterfully portrays frustrations and aborted desires to escape the mundane; transformative epiphanies both great and small; and the restraints, loneliness, violence, and contemplations of lives lived. Though Joyce’s subjects...
were considered as taboo as his language was unsavory, Dubliners was a milestone work praised for its unflinching realism.
It remains a transcendent and relatable portrait of the perils―and acceptance―of the human condition.