29 pages • 58 minutes read
James JoyceA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
James Joyce’s short story “Ivy Day in the Committee Room” critiques the Irish political situation of 1902 as a means to explore the role of the Irish political class in the growing political and social crisis at that time. It is a cynical study in political apathy, moral torpidity, and disillusionment, and a warning against cultural and political nostalgia as a barrier to real change.
As a vignette, the story is notable for its lack of action or plot. Instead, it is a static scene that details the dialogue within the Committee Room as members enter. As such, its subject is the nature and purpose of this dialogue, and the role of political discourse at the time in Ireland. The story itself is structured almost entirely around dialogue, emphasizing the third-person limited point of view. The narrative gives only occasional phrases of exposition, such as describing Mr. Henchy as a “bustling little man” (94). As such, the narrator shows rather than tells, as if the reader is themselves an observer in the room, obliged to deduce the thoughts and feelings of the characters from their words alone.
By James Joyce
An Encounter
James Joyce
A Painful Case
James Joyce
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
James Joyce, Dámaso Alonso, Dana Crăciun, Antoaneta Ralian, Seamus Deane
Araby
James Joyce
Clay
James Joyce
Counterparts
James Joyce
Dubliners
James Joyce, Terence Brown, Jeri Johnson
Eveline (Creative Short Stories)
James Joyce
Finnegans Wake
James Joyce
The Boarding House (Creative Classic Series)
James Joyce
The Dead
James Joyce
The Sisters
James Joyce
Two Gallants
James Joyce
Ulysses
James Joyce, John M. Woolsey, Morris L. Ernst