<span>Allegory is a form in which the idea is everything. The author has composed the story according to a plan; the reader's job is to decode the plan. Characters in allegory are rarely more than figures standing for ideas. While allegory is rarely written today, many writers of academic/literary fiction use SYMBOLISM in much the same way - characters exist primarily to stand for an idea, and readers must decode the symbolic structure in order to receive the story. Allegory involves creating a fairly thoroughgoing pattern of SYMBOLISM in which all major events and characters in a story have a meaning beyond themselves and those meanings can be put together to make some sort of overall sense.</span>
Answer:
B or C
Explanation:
Sherlock Holmes was kind of a dunce in his first stories
Joyce himself writes that the Dubliners, includes twelve of his stories dealing with the paralysis of the central male character and four of his stories dealing with the paralysis of the central female
character.
What is the theme of Dubliners by James Joyce?
- Every narrative in James Joyce's Dubliners has a theme of paralysis, according to critics. According to Joyce's own words, "I chose Dublin for the scenario because that city seemed to me to be the centre of paralysis.
- My purpose was to write a chapter of the moral history of my nation" (Joyce, letter to Grant Richards, 5 May 1906).
- There are twelve stories that deal with a central male character's paralysis in this moral history known as Dubliners, but only four stories deal with the alleged paralysis of a central female character.
- One could argue that Joyce wrote the character more well because he is a man and therefore qualified to do so.
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Answer:
heaven
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