No Sisters, No Brother, No Man: “The Sisters” and Joyce’s Gnomonics

Modern fiction has a certain way of achieving ‘literariness’ and ‘sophistication’; it does so by means of “ambiguity”. Being “witty” or “deceitful”, to quote William Empson, ambiguity seems to press home the writers’ intention of deferring the meaning by making the ontological status of the text as...

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Main Authors: Purgiv F., Ghahreman O.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Petra Christian University 2012-01-01
Series:K@ta: A Biannual Publication on the Study of Language and Literature
Subjects:
Online Access:http://puslit2.petra.ac.id/ejournal/index.php/ing/article/view/18657
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spelling doaj-1af0ccc5778340a89de43b32c08241042020-11-25T00:32:15ZengPetra Christian UniversityK@ta: A Biannual Publication on the Study of Language and Literature1411-26392012-01-011427580No Sisters, No Brother, No Man: “The Sisters” and Joyce’s GnomonicsPurgiv F.Ghahreman O.Modern fiction has a certain way of achieving ‘literariness’ and ‘sophistication’; it does so by means of “ambiguity”. Being “witty” or “deceitful”, to quote William Empson, ambiguity seems to press home the writers’ intention of deferring the meaning by making the ontological status of the text as implicit as possible. Ambiguity, therefore, forms a kind of narrative that determines the writer’s style. In James Joyce, however, particularly in the stories of Dubliners, this ambiguity is meant to reach a ‘mysterious’ level. Joyce’s “mysteries” are utterly different from commonly-believed, so-called textual “problems”. The problems can be solved, but mysteries should be “witnessed” and “attested” to be unfolded. Joyce’s mysterious ambiguities bear his unique signature: they represent the complexity, significance, and survival of a “gnomonic” patterning. Being a geometric figure, a gnomon is the part of a parallelogram which remains after a similar parallelogram has been taken away from one of its corners. The gnomon, therefore, represents an incomplete figure, like Joyce’s vaguely elliptical and incomplete stories. Joyce introduces the gnomon as the personification of imperfection, hopeless, paralysis, and damnation. The following study is going to elaborate this main principle of Joycean ambiguity in the opening story of Dubliners, “The Sisters”, and demonstrate its distinctively gnomonic narrative and characterization. http://puslit2.petra.ac.id/ejournal/index.php/ing/article/view/18657AmbiguitygnomonparalysisDublinersJames Joyce
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Purgiv F.
Ghahreman O.
spellingShingle Purgiv F.
Ghahreman O.
No Sisters, No Brother, No Man: “The Sisters” and Joyce’s Gnomonics
K@ta: A Biannual Publication on the Study of Language and Literature
Ambiguity
gnomon
paralysis
Dubliners
James Joyce
author_facet Purgiv F.
Ghahreman O.
author_sort Purgiv F.
title No Sisters, No Brother, No Man: “The Sisters” and Joyce’s Gnomonics
title_short No Sisters, No Brother, No Man: “The Sisters” and Joyce’s Gnomonics
title_full No Sisters, No Brother, No Man: “The Sisters” and Joyce’s Gnomonics
title_fullStr No Sisters, No Brother, No Man: “The Sisters” and Joyce’s Gnomonics
title_full_unstemmed No Sisters, No Brother, No Man: “The Sisters” and Joyce’s Gnomonics
title_sort no sisters, no brother, no man: “the sisters” and joyce’s gnomonics
publisher Petra Christian University
series K@ta: A Biannual Publication on the Study of Language and Literature
issn 1411-2639
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Modern fiction has a certain way of achieving ‘literariness’ and ‘sophistication’; it does so by means of “ambiguity”. Being “witty” or “deceitful”, to quote William Empson, ambiguity seems to press home the writers’ intention of deferring the meaning by making the ontological status of the text as implicit as possible. Ambiguity, therefore, forms a kind of narrative that determines the writer’s style. In James Joyce, however, particularly in the stories of Dubliners, this ambiguity is meant to reach a ‘mysterious’ level. Joyce’s “mysteries” are utterly different from commonly-believed, so-called textual “problems”. The problems can be solved, but mysteries should be “witnessed” and “attested” to be unfolded. Joyce’s mysterious ambiguities bear his unique signature: they represent the complexity, significance, and survival of a “gnomonic” patterning. Being a geometric figure, a gnomon is the part of a parallelogram which remains after a similar parallelogram has been taken away from one of its corners. The gnomon, therefore, represents an incomplete figure, like Joyce’s vaguely elliptical and incomplete stories. Joyce introduces the gnomon as the personification of imperfection, hopeless, paralysis, and damnation. The following study is going to elaborate this main principle of Joycean ambiguity in the opening story of Dubliners, “The Sisters”, and demonstrate its distinctively gnomonic narrative and characterization.
topic Ambiguity
gnomon
paralysis
Dubliners
James Joyce
url http://puslit2.petra.ac.id/ejournal/index.php/ing/article/view/18657
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