In 1914, James Joyce published Dubliners, a collection of short stories depicting life in Dublin at the turn of the century. One hundred years later, readers and critics alike continue to return to this book, Joyce\u27s first major work. One of these critics is Jack Morgan, whose study Joyce’s City offers refreshing readings on the occasion of the Dubliners centennial. Joyce’s City examines these now classic stories, a number of which are regarded as without equal in English literature, in terms of their historical and political contexts and often from markedly original perspectives. Morgan demonstrates, for example, the influence of American literature on “The Dead”--notably Washington Irving’s influence--and also traces the rich vein of G...
The involvement of politics and colonization is a key element in Irish literature, and James Joyce’s...
This thesis explores how the odyssey of style in James Joyce’s Ulysses multifariously renders the li...
James Joyce's relationship with his homeland was a complicated and often vexed one. The publication ...
The city's image acquired special prominence in many literary works related to modernist literature....
James Joyce's novel Ulysses depicts the Dublin of 1904 in such detail that Joyce was famously quoted...
This eclectic and probing collection of essays celebrates the centenary of the first publication of ...
Joyce once bragged that if Dublin were to be destroyed by some catastrophe, it could be rebuilt bric...
This project is the first comprehensive study of James Joyce’s literary and personal relationship wi...
Published ten years after George Moore’s The Untilled Field (1903) and one year before James Joyce’s...
Since the Middle Ages, the Pale, an area around Dublin most subject to British influence, has been s...
Although much has been written about the politics of Joyce's style, critics often fail to do justice...
James Joyce told his friend Frank Budgen: “I want’ said Joyce, as we were walking down the Universit...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "James Joyce and the Act of Reception is ...
This paper analyses the ways in which Leopold Bloom critiques Dublin city life from his position as ...
A review of Joyce's City: History, Politics, and Life in "Dubliners," by Jack Morga
The involvement of politics and colonization is a key element in Irish literature, and James Joyce’s...
This thesis explores how the odyssey of style in James Joyce’s Ulysses multifariously renders the li...
James Joyce's relationship with his homeland was a complicated and often vexed one. The publication ...
The city's image acquired special prominence in many literary works related to modernist literature....
James Joyce's novel Ulysses depicts the Dublin of 1904 in such detail that Joyce was famously quoted...
This eclectic and probing collection of essays celebrates the centenary of the first publication of ...
Joyce once bragged that if Dublin were to be destroyed by some catastrophe, it could be rebuilt bric...
This project is the first comprehensive study of James Joyce’s literary and personal relationship wi...
Published ten years after George Moore’s The Untilled Field (1903) and one year before James Joyce’s...
Since the Middle Ages, the Pale, an area around Dublin most subject to British influence, has been s...
Although much has been written about the politics of Joyce's style, critics often fail to do justice...
James Joyce told his friend Frank Budgen: “I want’ said Joyce, as we were walking down the Universit...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "James Joyce and the Act of Reception is ...
This paper analyses the ways in which Leopold Bloom critiques Dublin city life from his position as ...
A review of Joyce's City: History, Politics, and Life in "Dubliners," by Jack Morga
The involvement of politics and colonization is a key element in Irish literature, and James Joyce’s...
This thesis explores how the odyssey of style in James Joyce’s Ulysses multifariously renders the li...
James Joyce's relationship with his homeland was a complicated and often vexed one. The publication ...