When they get too out of control, he tells them "stay cool" and keeps them working instead of fighting. His life before he came back to Dublin shows that there is more to life than the northside of Dublin, and that some people actually do get to live their dreams. He has taught the band how to play, but he has also taught them how to push themselves, and they find themselves wanting more than just "The Commitments." In actuality, he has taught them to be too good, and that is their eventual downfall.
In conclusion, Joey Fagan is part of the glue that holds this novel together. He is just what the band needs to come together, and when he leaves, the band falls apart. He is more than just another member of the band; he is a...
Without him, "The Commitments" would not have gotten as far as they did. Perhaps most important, Fagan is the mechanism for change that the band needs to get on their way to success. Each of the band members grows and changes during the novel. They become young men who understand they have the ability to create their own future and become successful. Joey lets them fight, make up, break up, and fit together into a team, and then he leaves them on their own. He is a mentor, a friend, and a leader, but he is also a human, and he shows the band members they are very human, too.
References
Doyle, Paddy. "The Commitments." New York: Vintage Contemporaries, 1989.
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" Okonkwo inflexible traditionalism pitted him against his gentle son Nwoye, who joined the Christian European missionaries. In the book, Oknokwo had to participate in a ceremonial human sacrifice and endure a seven-year exile after his gun accidentally killed the son of the deceased warrior Ezeudu. He also lost part of himself when he lost Ikemefuna. Upon returning to the village, he found it torn apart by Western Imperialism. Finally, he
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