Despite the seeming confusion, the question is actually not difficult. But perhaps more pertinent is whether this is a matter worth thinking about at all. Since little space has been devoted to the issue in scholarship and since confusion has persisted for many years, many may consider the query trivial.
And while Edy Boardman was with little Tommy behind the pushcar she was just thinking would the day ever come when she could call herself his little wife to be. Then they could talk about her till they went blue in the face, Bertha Supple too, and Edy, little spitfire, because she would be twentytwo in November. Cissy and Edy run over with their brothers to watch, but Gerty stays back because she is entranced by the passionate gaze of the gentleman Bloom. Gerty sits up and glances at the gentleman, whom the narrative confirms is Leopold Bloom.
He notes that Gerty showed off her His mind shifts constantly from one thing to another. He imagines Gerty going home to her normal, innocent life, and he wonders what it would have been Bloom looks ahead at Gerty and her friends, who are off in the distance watching fireworks. He dwells on Cissy, Another rocket goes off, and Gerty turns around. Bloom feels like she is looking for him. He imagines the tiny particles blowing from her to him, and he thinks He thinks about the rock Gerty was sitting on and notes how attractive he finds girls of her age.
His thoughts Episode Circe. Kelly for ten shillings. A man chases after Bridie, who runs off into the darkness. Gerty MacDowell shows up and tells Bloom that she hates him—but Bloom denies knowing her.
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Robert Graves. Molly is an unashamedly sexual character and is not in danger of being labeled frivolously romantic or trampled and male-identified the way Gerty can be, but her sexuality is prone to judgmental dismissal as crude, wanton, and immoral. I was kissed. All yielding she tossed my hair. Kissed, she kissed me. Both of their memories place her in the typically male role of engineer and conductor of the relationship. She also recalls her other lovers as having been chosen and won by her.
She casually considers the idea of leaving Bloom. Gerty MacDowell and Molly Bloom are very different characters who share a tendency to be oversimplified and stereotyped.
They are easily relegated to the realm of hackneyed, meaningless characters before the complexities of their sexualities and identities are understood. Gerty is not a flighty, vain, hopeless romantic who is swallowed up by the male sexualities that dominate her world, but a skillful opportunist working towards a practical goal in an extremely competitive environment. Molly is not simply indulgent and ruled by her carnal desires, but asserts her own equality by claiming the right to sexual agency and self-determination.
Brown, Richard. James Joyce and Sexuality.
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