01386cam a2200241 i 45000010005000000030006000050050017000110080041000280100017000690200018000860400023001040500017001270820013001441000030001572450059001872600040002463000040002863360021003263370025003473380023003725200693003956510056010886205FISKH20250328100052.0120611s2012 stka 000 0 eng  a 2012427312 a9781847172471 aDLCbengcDLCerda aPR6019.O9 D8 a823.912 1 aJoyce, James,d1882-1941.10aDubliners /cJames Joyce ; introduction by John Boyne. aDublin :bThe O'Brien Press,c2012. a256 pages :billustrations ;c20 cm atext2rdacontent aunmediated2rdamedia avolume2rdacarrier aThese vivid, tightly focused observations about the life of Dublin's poorer classes originally made publishers uneasy: the stories contain unconventional themes and coarse language, and they mention actual people and places. Today, however, the stories are admired. They are considered to be masterful representations of Dublin done with economy and grace-representations, as Joyce himself once explained, of a chapter in the moral history of Ireland that give the Irish a good look at themselves. Although written for the Irish specifically, these stories-from the opening tale The Sisters to the final masterpiece The Dead-focus on moments of revelation that are common to all people.  0aDublin (Ireland)xSocial life and customsvFiction.