CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’ IN THE LIGHT OF
MODERNISTIC THEORY
Mubarak
Ali Lashari1,
Wahid
Pervez2
Abstract:
The
present study focuses on the aspects of modernism found in the novel. The most
findable aspects of modernism are individualism, stream of consciousness,
exile, and loss of faith. This paper highlights the role of modernism in
changing thoughts and ways of living. Furthermore, it describes modernism as
the opener of new door for the people determined to get rid out of the
boundaries of family, religion and country. Individualism is the centre of
modernistic novel around which all aspects revolve. How modern novel gives
preference the inner self of an individual to society’s nets and obstacle? This
paper discusses in detail the quest of the protagonist of the novel Dedalus who
is in search of new ways to see men’s role in the world.
Keywords:
modernism, individualism, stream of consciousness, exile, and loss of faith
1.
Introduction
A
Portrait of the Artist as a Youngman by Joyce is a harbinger of modernism in a
response to rapidly changing concepts in religion, social order and capitalism.
These all answers come from the actions of Stephen Dedalus.
Dedalus
is the main source of the writer through which he demonstrates the inner
feeling of an individual. Dedalus says "I will not serve that in which I
no longer believe, whether it call my home, my father land or my church.”
(Joyce, p. 191) Dedalus was born in a religious family, was sent to Jesuit
school Clongowes Wood College and Belvedere College where the Doctrines of the
Catholic faith are instilled in him. His mother and Dean of the studies wanted
him to be Jesuit but Dedalus was born to be a writer, not a priest. To become a
writer in the country where religion and people would be under some other
country was unacceptable to him. He wanted to seek his own identity and meaning
in complexity of modern experience through art, rather accepting
Mubarak
Ali Lashari, Wahid Pervez
CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’
IN
THE LIGHT OF MODERNISTIC THEORY
European
Journal of Applied Linguistics Studies - Volume 1 │ Issue 1 │ 2018 19
the
identity given to him by traditional society and culture. He hates Irish
society because it is victim of two empires, the British, which control it
politically, and Roman Catholic, which rules it spiritually from Rome. Father
Arnall's lecture on hell and heaven greatly affects him but his inner self
always guided him to follow his own desires. In chapter four, he rejects
religion when he sees a girl on seashore. At her glance his some aesthetic
feelings realize that this is actually is his inner feeling which likes to live
independently beyond the boundaries of family, religion, and country. Father of
Dedalus was the main source of growing gap between him and his family. Dedalus
has experienced severe traumas in the early course of his life. For example,
repeated financial troubles always distract his mind from his studies. Dedalus
is experiencing religious, national and pressure from his family. His journey
to seek the person inside him completes with the epiphany when he had a look of
a girl stood before him in midstream opened new door of life. After having a
look, he felt change in him. He came to know that art is the only field where
he can find peace and contentment. By the end of the novel, Dedalus rejects not
only Catholicism, but all religions. He said: ‚I tried to love..... It seems
now I failed.” Dedalus left for Paris leaving country, religion family and
friends.
2.
Research Question
How
has James Joyce presented the character of Dedalus in his novel: A Portrait of
the Artist as a Youngman?
3. Research
Methodology
3.1
Descriptive Qualitative Research
The
present research in its nature is qualitative and employs textual-narrative
analysis of the novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Youngman from the vantage
point Literary Discourse. The collected data for the present paper are
descriptive and narrative. Therefore, the qualitative tools like definition,
explanation, interpretation are employed to analyze the data and draw
generalization and conclusion.
According
to Kothari the writer of ‚Research Methodology: Methods and Techniques”
discusses the major purposes of the descriptive research and description of the
state of affairs as present. The research can report what has happened or what
is happening. (Kothari, 2008, p. 3). Moreover, in the eyes of Calmorin et al
(2007) descriptive research is ‚to find new truth. According to his deep study
in the field of research methodology truth may have different forms such as
increased quality of knowledge, a new generalization or a new „law‟, an
increased insight into factors which are operating the discovery of new causal
relationship, a more accurate formulation of the problem to be solved and many
others‛ (p. 70)
Mubarak
Ali Lashari, Wahid Pervez
CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’
IN
THE LIGHT OF MODERNISTIC THEORY
European
Journal of Applied Linguistics Studies - Volume 1 │ Issue 1 │ 2018 20
4.
Data Analysis / Discussion
4.1
Individualism
‚This
race and this country and this life produced me, he said. I shall express myself
as I am.‛ (Joyce, p. 156).
Individualism
is the idea that freedom and thought of action for each person is the most
important quality of a society, rather than shared effort and responsibility.
(Cambridge Advanced Learners)
Individualism
is the main aspect of modernism which gives rise to other aspects of modernism.
In this aspect character's personality, his thoughts, likes and dislikes remain
primary concern of the writer. In the same way, Dedalus as a modern hero breaks
restrictions of family, church and nation to form his own destiny according to
his inner light. He defeats the limitations of his cultures and environments,
and disentangles himself from these knots and ties.
In
childhood, Dedalus is completely integrated into his little world. He is hardly
able to put together a coherent stream of thought. Dedalus’s confusion as a
small boy in a strict Jesuit school, his discontent with his father and the
financial situation of the family and his growing feeling of alienation made
him mentally exile. In adolescence, Dedalus goes to prostitution and gives in
to lust. Later, he becomes religious and even considers entering priesthood. In
his ways many walls raised but he demolishes every obstacle comes between him
and his desire. At the end of chapter, four at what is really the climax of the
novel; Dedalus has vision of becoming an artist. His journey to seek the person
inside him completes with the epiphany when he had a look of a girl stood
before him in midstream her look opened new door of life for him. After having
a look, he felt change in him. He came to know that art is the only field where
he can find peace and contentment. By the end of the novel, Dedalus rejects not
only Catholicism, but religion all tougher. He said: ‚I tried to love..... It seems
now I failed.‛ Dedalus, left for Paris leaving country, religion family and
friends.
"When
the soul of a man is borne in this country there are nets flung at it to hold
it back from flight, you talk to me of nationality, language religion. I shall
try to flight by those nets" (Joyce, p. 157)
Joyce
wants to say in these lines that Ireland is an independent country but even
though it can’t take its decision its own. Its political decisions are taken by
England and its Church is controlled by Rome. In Ireland Roman Catholic,
religion is strictly followed. A child born in catholic family can’t become
anything except a Jesuit. In Ireland English language was spoken that is
considered borrowed language. Joyce shows peoples’ unawareness of their own
language in the novel. Dedalus also experiences in the novel. His Catholic
family, Catholic school and Catholic country
Mubarak
Ali Lashari, Wahid Pervez
CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’
IN
THE LIGHT OF MODERNISTIC THEORY
European
Journal of Applied Linguistics Studies - Volume 1 │ Issue 1 │ 2018 21
were
main hindrances to his success. He considered to be in Ireland is to be a
slave. He even dislikes to live in the country that’s power would be in other
country’s hand. Therefore, Dedalus decides to leave everything that comes in
his ways. He left for Paris leaving his family, religion and country behind.
‚I
will tell you what I will do and what I will not do. I will not serve that in
which I no longer believe, whether it call itself my home, my father land, or
my church and I will try to express myself in some mode of life for art as
freely I can and as holy as I can, using for my defense the only arms allow
myself to use silence exile and cunning.‛ (Joyce, p. 191)
In
discussion with Cranly, Dedalus clearly says that he does not believe in
religion and hates to live in his country. In Ireland he was bound between two
opposing ideas, one is religious and other is his own thought and feeling. His
family and Catholic religion has limited his thought. He wanted to be a writer
but his family and school has left only one opportunity for him and that was
priesthood. He belonged to such family there he could only become a Jesuit. He
had known that to live in Ireland is to live in prison. There was no solution
for him except to escape. England and Rome were ruling Ireland. He decides to
leave for Paris because there he would be away from bondage of family,
religion.
‚I
do not fear to be alone or to be spurned for another or to leave whatever. I
have to leave. And I am not afraid to make a mistake, even a great mistake,
lifelong mistake and perhaps as long as eternity too.” (Joyce, p. 191)
Joyce
discusses boldness of modern people. People in modern age took their decision
fearlessly. To fulfill their desire they did not care of any loss. To represent
an example of modern man Joyce portraits the character of Dedalus. His courage
was shown throughout the novel. After realizing his exact interest, he decides
to become an artist. He adamantly determined to become a writer for which he
was ready to do anything. His experiences since childhood to young hood made
him experienced that family, religion, beloved, friend all were those forces
which prevent to do what he wanted to do. That’s why Dedalus took out one
solution to be saved from all these forces. He took final decision to escape
from the country and that was best solution at his glance. Neither he would be
available in the country nor could anyone have access to him.
‚Welcome,
O life! I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience and
to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated consciousness of my race"
(Joyce, p. 196)
These
final lines of the novel proclaim Stephen’s aim to be an artist for the rest of
his life. The phrase ‚the smithy of my soul‛ indicates that he strives to be an
artist whose individual consciousness is the foundation for all his work. The
reference to "the
Mubarak
Ali Lashari, Wahid Pervez
CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’
IN
THE LIGHT OF MODERNISTIC THEORY
European
Journal of Applied Linguistics Studies - Volume 1 │ Issue 1 │ 2018 22
uncreated
conscience of my race‛ implies that he strives to be an artist who uses his
individual voice to create a voice and conscience for the community into which
he has been born. The final its reference to ‚old father‛ and ‚old artificer‛
reinforces Stephen’s two fold mission. He invokes his ‚old father‛ which can be
read as either Simon Dedalus or Ireland itself to acknowledge his debt to his
past. He invokes the ‚older artificer‛ his namesake Dedalus, the master
craftsman from ancient mythology to emphasize his role as an artist. He is
through his art that Stephen will use his individuality to create a conscience
for community.
4.2
Stream of Consciousness
The
term was coined by Henry James in principal of psychology (1990). The modernist
writers excessively used this term in their books that way the novels produced
in this period are called stream of consciousness. Cuddon says ‚now an almost
indispensable term in literary criticism, it refers to that technique which
seeks to depict the multitudinous thoughts and feelings which pass through tne
mind.” (Cuddon, p. 866)
Acceding
to this term novelist discusses the characters’ ideas. This is basically a
technique used in literature to convey how characters feels or what the
characters think. The characters’ emotions are portrayed either through hints
within dialogue or actions taken by the characters in certain situations.
A
portrait of artist as a Youngman is a stream of consciousness novel because the
narrator is not only telling a story but also states the state of mind of
characters. Joys used this term technically in this novel. He basically
discovered the mental state of modern people and to do this Joyce used Dedalus
his source to convey this idea. Joyce used the third person to describe the
experiences of Dedalus we first encounter stream of consciousness at the
beginning of the book when Dedalus is a chilled pores, as, in the opening
lines:
‚Once
upon a time and very good time it was along the road met a niceness little boy
named baby tucked.” (Joyce, p. 1)
The
pressures from expectations gradually become a burden and his soul searches
finally results in art mea of breaking the cage. To Dedalus art was
nevertheless a way of liberating his soul by fulfilling his hunger for meaning
not with what was imposed upon him by others but by something originating from
inside himself. Stephen’s path to becoming an artist very step while going
through the novel. His first eat of courage, Independence and rebellion is
where he porters his palm-whipping later on, he would also commit hers say when
writing a school essay and reject priesthood. The gradual gap between him and
his family especially his father is ever more obvious as time pass. Dedalus has
experienced severe traumas in the early course of his life, namely repeated
financial troubles which Dedalus was a witness of and the deep are the
questions of religion and patriotism with his own family.
Mubarak
Ali Lashari, Wahid Pervez
CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’
IN
THE LIGHT OF MODERNISTIC THEORY
European
Journal of Applied Linguistics Studies - Volume 1 │ Issue 1 │ 2018 23
‚As
the train streamed out fog the station he recalled his childhood wonder of
years before and every event of his first day at Cologowes‛. (Joyce, p. 66)
Dedalus
passed crucial days at Colongowes. In childhood, Dedalus was so simple. He was
just an observer. In train, he recalled the days when he was having lunch with
his family. He remembered how they were having discussion over religion and
politics. Dedalus’s experience at school was worst which he never forgot. He
was badly treated by bullies of class.
‚And
not to have any one person, Cranly said who would be more than a friend, more
even than the noblest and truest friend a man ere had.” (Joyce p. 191)
Joyce
highlights the feeling and thinking of Cranly. He was disheartened by Dedalus.
Dedalus’s straightforward comments of to live alone in another country shocked
him severely. In loneliness, Cranly thought that how cruel Dedalus had become
that he even had not care of his close friend. To live friendless was main
issue on which cranly was thinking. Cranly was upset and pondering over the
thinking of his friend.
‛Constant
voices of his father and master urge him to be a good catholic above all
things. When the gymnasium had been opened he had heard another voice urging
him to be strong and manly and health and when the movement towards the
national revival had begun to be felt in college yet another voice had bidden
him to be true to his country and help to raise up her language and tradition‛
(Joyce, p. 68)
Joyce’s
use of stream of consciousness technique in these lines is quite obvious.
Dedalus is shown under pressure of family and religion in him. His family’s
gradual expectation from him was increasing burden on his personality. The
clash between his and his family’s desire put him into the state of dilemma.
His family wanted him to be priest and he wanted to be a writer. He always
remained in dilemma that what he should choose. But as a modern man, he
revealed the secret what an individual should do. In spite of family’s pressure
and strict rules of Catholic school, he preferred his desires to them. He had
heard the inner voice of hidden man.
4.3
Exile
‚He
had known neither the pleasure of companionship with other nor the vigor of rude
male health nor flail piety nothing stride within his soul but a cold and cruel
and loveless lust. His childhood was died or lost and with it his soul capable
of simple joys and he was drifting amid life like the barren shell of the
moon.” (Joyce, p. 72-73)
Mubarak
Ali Lashari, Wahid Pervez
CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’
IN
THE LIGHT OF MODERNISTIC THEORY
European
Journal of Applied Linguistics Studies - Volume 1 │ Issue 1 │ 2018 24
A
person who lives outside his own country either from choice or he is forced to
do so. Stephen Dedalus’s nature of exile is twofold. Firstly he was mentally
and secondly physically exile. His physical exile at the end of the novel shows
that he was not escaping from Ireland but he was escaping with it. His mind was
totally different from the rest of family members. His family’s downfall,
strict rules of religion and country’s position like a slave caused his mental
exile. The sense of separation aroused in him from the time he started
searching for the man inside him. The man inside him rejected to follow all
imposed rules. His mental exile was due to his nature that never let him accept
any law and orders against his desire. He was determined to achieve that suited
to his personality. His quest of suitable field for his personality made him
mentally exile.
‚I
do not fear to be alone or to be spurned for another or to leave whatever. I
have to leave. And I am not afraid to make a mistake, even a great mistake,
lifelong mistake and perhaps as long as eternity too.” (Joyce, p. 191)
Physical
exile of Dedalus was another outlook of his mental state. He hated to live in
the country that was despite of being independent ruled by another country,
there, leaving national language borrowed language was given preference and
spoken. Ireland was politically governed by England and religiously by Rome. It
seems as if Ireland was colonized by these two powers. Dedalus even did not
accept to live in the country that was itself slave of others. He did not leave
only his friends, love, family, religion but to completely untangle himself he
left for Paris.
4.4
Loss of faith
‚His
destiny was to be elusive of social and religious orders. The wisdom of the
priest appeal did not touch him to the quick. He was destined to learn his own
wisdom apart from others or to learn the wisdom of others wandering among the
snares of the world.” (Joyce, p. 111)
Joyce
raised the issue of religion in his novel which shows religion is also one of
the main hindrances to success for modern people. In character of Dedalus we
see him rejecting religion to become an artist. Joyce used Dedalus as a tool to
respond that how an artist can have a journey to achieve his goal. Dedalus grew
up in catholic family, he was sent to a strict Catholic boarding school where
he spent his childhood days those were painful and unforgettable for him. He
was teased by bullies of the school, pandied by teacher unreasonably and forced
him to be priest. Dedalus was tied between two different concepts. One is
Catholic Church and other is his own thoughts and feelings. His struggle was
shown in the novel that how Dedalus since childhood struggled to choose his
best. In young hood he had the ability to choose right way, slowly and
gradually he experienced and finally found appropriate place in writing.
Mubarak
Ali Lashari, Wahid Pervez
CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’
IN
THE LIGHT OF MODERNISTIC THEORY
European
Journal of Applied Linguistics Studies - Volume 1 │ Issue 1 │ 2018 25
He
was always said to become a priest but he was never asked what he wanted to be.
Modernism highlights issues of individual’s interest that was always crushed by
family and religion. His belief in religion was weak. He was compelled to be
religious. He never felt desired relief for what he was looking. To find satisfactory
place for the man inside him he visited different prostitutes but in their
company, he found only source of luscious desire. After lecture of Father Arnal
on torment of hell, he returned to religion. He asked forgiveness of God and
determined not to return to prostitution. But his confession could not stop him
to find out the field which his inner-self demands.
His
journey to seek the person inside him completes with the epiphany when he had a
look of a girl stood before him in midstream. Her look opened new door of life
for him.
“…her
image passed into his soul forever and no word had broken the holy silence of
his ecstasy. Her eyes called him to and his soul had leaped at the call.”
(Joyce, p. 132)
After
having a look, he felt change in him. He came to know that art is the only
field where he can find peace and contentment. By the end of the novel, Dedalus
rejects not only Catholicism, but religion altogether. He said: ‚I tried to
love..... It seems now I failed.” Dedalus, left for Paris leaving country,
religion family and friends.
5.
Conclusion
The
study concludes that modern era generated new ideas in people. Modernism
provided the main idea of an individual’s importance. Modernism gave rights to
every person to live according to their disposition. The term ‚stream of
consciousness‛ remained main technique of modern novels. This is also one of
the key elements of modern novels. Modern novels propagated an idea under that
an individual should not care about anyone or anything if they try to become obstacle
in ways of his success. To achieve his goal a person can leave his family,
religion, friends, beloved and even country. Different elements of modern novel
discuss mental and physical exile of protagonist of the novel Stephan Dedalus.
He rejects religion to become an artist. Because, being a member of a catholic
family to become an artist was impossible.
References
The
Essays of Virginia Woolf, vol III, ed. Andrew Mc. Neillie, London, Hogarth
Press, (1986- 1994), p. 435
The
Essays of Virginia Woolf, vol III, ed. Andrew Mc. Neillie, London, Hogarth
Press, (1986- 1994), p. 435-436
Jose
Ortega y Gasset, The Dehumanization of Art and Ideas and the Novel, Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1948, p. 38
Mubarak
Ali Lashari, Wahid Pervez
CRITICAL
STUDY OF JOYCE’S NOVEL ‘A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNGMAN’
IN
THE LIGHT OF MODERNISTIC THEORY
European
Journal of Applied Linguistics Studies - Volume 1 │ Issue 1 │ 2018 26
Deborah
Parsons, Theorists of the Modernist Novel: James Joyce, Dorothy Richardson,
Virginia Woolf, Routledge Critical Thinkers, London and New York, 2007, p. 15
Kime
Scott Bonnie, The Gender of Modernism, Bloomington, Indiana University Press,
1990, p. 16
The
Essays of Virginia Woolf, vol IV, ed. Andrew Mc. Neillie, London, Hogarth
Press, (1986-1994), p. 160
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