By applying James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake to Kenneth Burke’s dramatic pentad, I argue that Joyce’s lexical ambiguities, while intentionally caustic, succeed in strengthening rather than discarding typical dramatic structures. Renowned for its perplexities, the Wake revels in its flexible allusions and word play. These “puns and reedles,” as Joyce calls them, serve to distort what readers would generally classify as elements of narrative form, summed up succinctly by Burke’s dramatic pentad: act, scene, agent, agency, and purpose. Nevertheless, I attempt to prove that Joyce’s work emerges rhetorically sound through his authorial motives, motives which expand the terms of Burke’s pentad beyond their supposed boundaries
The present paper has the objective of putting into discussion the language of the work Finnegans Wa...
James Joyce, more known as a well-known modern fictionist who rightly possesses a unique position in...
The subject of influence and allusion has been a central concern in criticism of Finnegans Wake from...
The challenge of James Joyce’s final work, Finnegans Wake, is an ethical one, and one whose implicat...
"Finnegans Wake" has struck many of its exegetes as the epitome of the postmodern text. The oddity o...
The aims of the thesis are to show how "grammar,' etymological sense of "art or technique of the let...
This thesis examines the ways in which performances of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) navigate ...
This thesis examines the ways in which performances of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) navigate ...
Inter-textual relationships between James Joyce's works have long-since been noted, but the monograp...
Originally published in 1977. The pioneer critics of Finnegans Wake hailed the work as a radical cri...
This text deals with the relationship between literature and mathematics. It is the first of a serie...
“Ah, there’s only one man he’s got to get the better of now, and that’s that Shakespeare!” -Nora Jo...
My research investigates James Joyce's and Samuel Beckett's personal knowledge of “madness”: in par...
The existence of characters in Joyce’s dream world of Finnegans Wake rarely proves their singular pr...
The thesis challenges the paradigm of hierarchical interpretive competence adopted in the academic c...
The present paper has the objective of putting into discussion the language of the work Finnegans Wa...
James Joyce, more known as a well-known modern fictionist who rightly possesses a unique position in...
The subject of influence and allusion has been a central concern in criticism of Finnegans Wake from...
The challenge of James Joyce’s final work, Finnegans Wake, is an ethical one, and one whose implicat...
"Finnegans Wake" has struck many of its exegetes as the epitome of the postmodern text. The oddity o...
The aims of the thesis are to show how "grammar,' etymological sense of "art or technique of the let...
This thesis examines the ways in which performances of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) navigate ...
This thesis examines the ways in which performances of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) navigate ...
Inter-textual relationships between James Joyce's works have long-since been noted, but the monograp...
Originally published in 1977. The pioneer critics of Finnegans Wake hailed the work as a radical cri...
This text deals with the relationship between literature and mathematics. It is the first of a serie...
“Ah, there’s only one man he’s got to get the better of now, and that’s that Shakespeare!” -Nora Jo...
My research investigates James Joyce's and Samuel Beckett's personal knowledge of “madness”: in par...
The existence of characters in Joyce’s dream world of Finnegans Wake rarely proves their singular pr...
The thesis challenges the paradigm of hierarchical interpretive competence adopted in the academic c...
The present paper has the objective of putting into discussion the language of the work Finnegans Wa...
James Joyce, more known as a well-known modern fictionist who rightly possesses a unique position in...
The subject of influence and allusion has been a central concern in criticism of Finnegans Wake from...