Epiphany (literature)

Epiphany in literature refers generally to a visionary moment when a character has a sudden insight or realization that changes their understanding of themselves or their comprehension of the world. The term has a more specialized sense as a literary device distinct to modernist fiction.[1] Author James Joyce first borrowed the religious term "Epiphany" and adopted it into a profane literary context in Stephen Hero (1904–1906), an early version of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. In that manuscript, Stephen Daedalus defines epiphany as "a sudden spiritual manifestation, whether in the vulgarity of speech or of gesture or in a memorable phase of the mind itself."[2] Stephen's epiphanies are moments of heightened poetic perception in the trivial aspects of everyday Dublin life, non-religious and non-mystical in nature. They become the basis of Stephen's theory of aesthetic perception as well as his writing. In similar terms, Joyce experimented with epiphany throughout his career, from the short stories he wrote between 1898 and 1904 which were central to his early work, to his late novel Finnegans Wake (1939). Scholars used Joyce's term to describe a common feature of the modernist novel, with authors as varied as Virginia Woolf, Marcel Proust, Ezra Pound, and Katherine Mansfield all featuring these sudden moments of vision as an aspect of the contemporary mind. Joycean or modernist epiphany has its roots in nineteenth-century lyric poetry, especially the Wordsworthian "spots of time,"[3] as well as the sudden spiritual insights that formed the basis of traditional spiritual autobiography.[4] Philosopher Charles Taylor explains the rise of epiphany in modernist art as a reaction against the rise of a "commercial-industrial-capitalist society" during the early twentieth century.[5]

  1. ^ Morris, Beja. Epiphany in the Modern Novel (1916). London: Peter Owen, 1971.
  2. ^ Joyce, James (1944). Stephen Hero. London: Jonathan Cape. p. 216. Retrieved 8 March 2024.
  3. ^ See Beja. Also Abrams, M.H. Natural Supernaturalism: Tradition and Revolution in Romantic Literature. New York: Norton, 1971; and Nichols, Ashton. The Poetics of Epiphany: Nineteenth-Century Origins of the Modern Literary Movement. Tuscaloosa: U. of Alabama P., 1987.
  4. ^ Kim, Sharon. Literary Epiphany in the Novel, 1850–1950: Constellations of the Soul. NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.
  5. ^ Taylor, Charles. Sources of the Self. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1989) 422.

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search