A reactionary and a renegade, Janies Joyce divorced himself from the Catholic Church in 1898. Since then, many critics for good reason have chosen to see him as a purely secular writer, whose concern for a spiritual element in life is lacking. They have read his condemnation of the Catholic church, felt the vehemence of his insults. They have imagined his characters--Dedalus, Bloom, Molly, Mulligan, Earwicker, Shem, Shawn--who by their thoughts and actions testify to Joyce\u27s want to spiritual fervor. They read Joyce and shake their heads at his spiritual poverty. But, this kind of reading of James Joyce is unjust. It is not fair to a man educated by the Jesuits for twelve years and whose sole mission during his lifetime, besides caring f...
This thesis examines the relationship between the fiction of James Joyce and the theological practic...
The paper examines religious consciousness in the modernist novels of Joseph Conrad's 1902 Heart of ...
This paper suggests the value of reading James Joyce's Ulysses through the lens of Friedrich Nietzsc...
In forging Stephen Dedalus, a character central to James Joyce’s novel, A Portrait of the Artist as ...
When I first encountered James Joyce's Ulysses, at the age of sixteen, I was predictably unprepared ...
In the past forty years, many critics have increasingly read James Joyce’s Ulysses through attention...
Leopold Bloom, the protagonist of Janes Joyce Ulysses, is the modern Everyman by virtue of his munda...
Throughout James Joyce's novels, themes of freedom and entrapment prevail, as characters search for ...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Ar...
The result of the interaction between Bloom and Dedalus, Kimball argues as a central tenet in her un...
This research paper employs a psychological approach to analyze James Joyce's groundbreaking novel, ...
This thesis explores and evaluates the work of James Joyce using the ideas of Friedrich Nietzsche. I...
The dissertation explores the intellectual kinship and parallel development of Pater and Joyce. The ...
James Joyce had not yet begun his most productive years of writing when he first became acquainted w...
Abstract—This paper aims to analyze the homosocial desire and the lack of it in two protagonists and...
This thesis examines the relationship between the fiction of James Joyce and the theological practic...
The paper examines religious consciousness in the modernist novels of Joseph Conrad's 1902 Heart of ...
This paper suggests the value of reading James Joyce's Ulysses through the lens of Friedrich Nietzsc...
In forging Stephen Dedalus, a character central to James Joyce’s novel, A Portrait of the Artist as ...
When I first encountered James Joyce's Ulysses, at the age of sixteen, I was predictably unprepared ...
In the past forty years, many critics have increasingly read James Joyce’s Ulysses through attention...
Leopold Bloom, the protagonist of Janes Joyce Ulysses, is the modern Everyman by virtue of his munda...
Throughout James Joyce's novels, themes of freedom and entrapment prevail, as characters search for ...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Ar...
The result of the interaction between Bloom and Dedalus, Kimball argues as a central tenet in her un...
This research paper employs a psychological approach to analyze James Joyce's groundbreaking novel, ...
This thesis explores and evaluates the work of James Joyce using the ideas of Friedrich Nietzsche. I...
The dissertation explores the intellectual kinship and parallel development of Pater and Joyce. The ...
James Joyce had not yet begun his most productive years of writing when he first became acquainted w...
Abstract—This paper aims to analyze the homosocial desire and the lack of it in two protagonists and...
This thesis examines the relationship between the fiction of James Joyce and the theological practic...
The paper examines religious consciousness in the modernist novels of Joseph Conrad's 1902 Heart of ...
This paper suggests the value of reading James Joyce's Ulysses through the lens of Friedrich Nietzsc...