James Joyce is a fascinating writer, but he can be a most difficult author to teach. In her dissertation, Lynn Bongiovanni brings a recent viewpoint – empire theory – to bear on this most singular author and finds an interesting paradox. While Joyce inveighed against imperial rule – in this case, Ireland’s “colonization” by the British – he was capable of celebrating the fruits of empire in his writings. Just as you and I may deplore the consequences of what might be called the modern technology “empire,” even as we happily use our refrigerators and computers, Joyce had his own conflicted attitude towards empire. In this brief excerpt from Prof. Bongionvanni’s full dissertation¸ and in her interview, the author begins to set out the structu...
Generations of scholars have sought to define the nature of James Joyce\u27s portrayal of Ireland an...
Also published in Symposium Melitensia Vol. 15 (2019) p. 57-64When James Joyce’s novel Ulysses was p...
“We are still learning to be Joyce’s contemporaries, to understand our interpreter.” This is the ope...
Thesis (S.B. in Literature)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 2009.Includ...
As a novel that asks how we can live in a world of uncertain values and urgent identity politics, Ja...
\u27Ulysses is like a great net let down upon the life of a microcosmic city-state, Dublin, wherein ...
\u27Ulysses is like a great net let down upon the life of a microcosmic city-state, Dublin, wherein ...
This dissertation argues that James Joyce\u27s fiction is ethnographic. In Dubliners, Portrait of th...
166 p.The figure of James Joyce is intangible, an almost all-encompassing figure whose height and br...
James Joyce’s interest in accessing the global through the core of the local makes him a particularl...
Written with Ireland as the setting of the novel, The Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man, brings f...
Roughly two-thirds of the way through Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners (1956), there is a section h...
Stately, plump Oliver Gogarty sits down in 1921 to read the mammoth novel that his erstwhile friend ...
In forging Stephen Dedalus, a character central to James Joyce’s novel, A Portrait of the Artist as ...
Joyce\u27s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man functions as an axis around which writers from ...
Generations of scholars have sought to define the nature of James Joyce\u27s portrayal of Ireland an...
Also published in Symposium Melitensia Vol. 15 (2019) p. 57-64When James Joyce’s novel Ulysses was p...
“We are still learning to be Joyce’s contemporaries, to understand our interpreter.” This is the ope...
Thesis (S.B. in Literature)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 2009.Includ...
As a novel that asks how we can live in a world of uncertain values and urgent identity politics, Ja...
\u27Ulysses is like a great net let down upon the life of a microcosmic city-state, Dublin, wherein ...
\u27Ulysses is like a great net let down upon the life of a microcosmic city-state, Dublin, wherein ...
This dissertation argues that James Joyce\u27s fiction is ethnographic. In Dubliners, Portrait of th...
166 p.The figure of James Joyce is intangible, an almost all-encompassing figure whose height and br...
James Joyce’s interest in accessing the global through the core of the local makes him a particularl...
Written with Ireland as the setting of the novel, The Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man, brings f...
Roughly two-thirds of the way through Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners (1956), there is a section h...
Stately, plump Oliver Gogarty sits down in 1921 to read the mammoth novel that his erstwhile friend ...
In forging Stephen Dedalus, a character central to James Joyce’s novel, A Portrait of the Artist as ...
Joyce\u27s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man functions as an axis around which writers from ...
Generations of scholars have sought to define the nature of James Joyce\u27s portrayal of Ireland an...
Also published in Symposium Melitensia Vol. 15 (2019) p. 57-64When James Joyce’s novel Ulysses was p...
“We are still learning to be Joyce’s contemporaries, to understand our interpreter.” This is the ope...