My research investigates James Joyce's and Samuel Beckett's personal knowledge of “madness”: in particular, I will look at how these experiences of madness (either one’s own, or of another) are turned into literature, how they are represented in an aesthetic form in Finnegans Wake and in Beckett’s early English prose. My choice of the generic term a “madness” reflects the necessity of considering mental illness as a multilayered and even uncanny set of different physical and mental conditions, and the discourses about them, which were at the centre of scientific and artistic debates during the early decades of the 20th century. As we will see, the textual representations of madness in both Joyce and (early) Beckett, are the result o...
This paper will zoom-in upon one of the greatest modernist writers and influential figures of the tw...
The present paper has the objective of putting into discussion the language of the work Finnegans Wa...
Processing Note: Further review neededThe Milman Parry Lecture on Oral Tradition for 1990-9
"Finnegans Wake" has struck many of its exegetes as the epitome of the postmodern text. The oddity o...
Aside from the recent development in the psychiatry, melancholy has been a discursive theme in many...
This thesis explores various states as they are experienced by Joycean characters. It is concerned w...
The challenge of James Joyce’s final work, Finnegans Wake, is an ethical one, and one whose implicat...
This thesis explores various states as they are experienced by Joycean characters. It is concerned w...
The purpose of this study is to analyse how James Joyce builds a large part of his narrative through...
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 ...
By applying James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake to Kenneth Burke’s dramatic pentad, I argue that Joyce’s le...
This essay analyses the representation of mental processes in James Joyce’s Ulysses in light of ‘sci...
This thesis considers the imbrications created by James Joyce in his writing with the work of John M...
This essay analyses the representation of mental processes in James Joyce’s Ulysses in light of ‘sci...
This paper will zoom-in upon one of the greatest modernist writers and influential figures of the tw...
The present paper has the objective of putting into discussion the language of the work Finnegans Wa...
Processing Note: Further review neededThe Milman Parry Lecture on Oral Tradition for 1990-9
"Finnegans Wake" has struck many of its exegetes as the epitome of the postmodern text. The oddity o...
Aside from the recent development in the psychiatry, melancholy has been a discursive theme in many...
This thesis explores various states as they are experienced by Joycean characters. It is concerned w...
The challenge of James Joyce’s final work, Finnegans Wake, is an ethical one, and one whose implicat...
This thesis explores various states as they are experienced by Joycean characters. It is concerned w...
The purpose of this study is to analyse how James Joyce builds a large part of his narrative through...
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 ...
By applying James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake to Kenneth Burke’s dramatic pentad, I argue that Joyce’s le...
This essay analyses the representation of mental processes in James Joyce’s Ulysses in light of ‘sci...
This thesis considers the imbrications created by James Joyce in his writing with the work of John M...
This essay analyses the representation of mental processes in James Joyce’s Ulysses in light of ‘sci...
This paper will zoom-in upon one of the greatest modernist writers and influential figures of the tw...
The present paper has the objective of putting into discussion the language of the work Finnegans Wa...
Processing Note: Further review neededThe Milman Parry Lecture on Oral Tradition for 1990-9