In Finnegans Wake, James Joyce explores the associations of the Irish myth of the “Black Pig”, building scenes around its motifs in Chapter I, Book 1 and in Chapter III, Book 4. Through the use of comedy (satire, parody, and irony), Joyce offers a critique of the way Irish Revival writers came to terms with myth and the way they attempted to trace and establish a national identity in writing. Simultaneously, the passages offer an affirmation.Dans Finnegans Wake, James Joyce explore les associations du mythe irlandais du « Cochon Noir », en construisant des scènes autour de ses motifs dans le Chapitre I, Livre 1 et dans le Chapitre III, Livre 4. Par le recours à la comédie (satire, parodie et ironie), Joyce offre une critique de la façon don...
The complex of rites, rituals, and mythic reenactments known in Irish mythology as the Rites of Tara...
Few animals can be met through the works of James Joyce. An unnamed cat and threatening dog in Ulyss...
In ‘Telemachus’, the first episode of Ulysses, Stephen Dedalus declares himself ‘servant of two mast...
Though much has been written on Joyce and mythology, this thesis explains the necessary link between...
This thesis examines the ways in which performances of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) navigate ...
In March 2006 the National Library of Ireland acquired a small but significant tranche of Joyce manu...
This thesis examines the ways in which performances of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) navigate ...
"Finnegans Wake" has struck many of its exegetes as the epitome of the postmodern text. The oddity o...
William Shakespeare has led a rich and varied afterlife in Ireland. That this history documents the ...
This project takes a new approach to the treatment of Catholicism in Finnegans Wake, by looking beyo...
Processing Note: Further review neededThe Milman Parry Lecture on Oral Tradition for 1990-9
My research investigates James Joyce's and Samuel Beckett's personal knowledge of “madness”: in par...
Female characters frequently appear as animals in the unstable universe of James Joyce’s a Finnegans...
This thesis presents an analysis and interpretation of Joycean literary devices, narrative technique...
By applying James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake to Kenneth Burke’s dramatic pentad, I argue that Joyce’s le...
The complex of rites, rituals, and mythic reenactments known in Irish mythology as the Rites of Tara...
Few animals can be met through the works of James Joyce. An unnamed cat and threatening dog in Ulyss...
In ‘Telemachus’, the first episode of Ulysses, Stephen Dedalus declares himself ‘servant of two mast...
Though much has been written on Joyce and mythology, this thesis explains the necessary link between...
This thesis examines the ways in which performances of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) navigate ...
In March 2006 the National Library of Ireland acquired a small but significant tranche of Joyce manu...
This thesis examines the ways in which performances of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) navigate ...
"Finnegans Wake" has struck many of its exegetes as the epitome of the postmodern text. The oddity o...
William Shakespeare has led a rich and varied afterlife in Ireland. That this history documents the ...
This project takes a new approach to the treatment of Catholicism in Finnegans Wake, by looking beyo...
Processing Note: Further review neededThe Milman Parry Lecture on Oral Tradition for 1990-9
My research investigates James Joyce's and Samuel Beckett's personal knowledge of “madness”: in par...
Female characters frequently appear as animals in the unstable universe of James Joyce’s a Finnegans...
This thesis presents an analysis and interpretation of Joycean literary devices, narrative technique...
By applying James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake to Kenneth Burke’s dramatic pentad, I argue that Joyce’s le...
The complex of rites, rituals, and mythic reenactments known in Irish mythology as the Rites of Tara...
Few animals can be met through the works of James Joyce. An unnamed cat and threatening dog in Ulyss...
In ‘Telemachus’, the first episode of Ulysses, Stephen Dedalus declares himself ‘servant of two mast...