In his work Ulysses, James Joyce uses the characters of Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus to express his belief about the deconstruction of binaries- both socially and biologically created. Stephen’s preoccupation with ineluctable entelechy prompts him to reject his biological father, Simon, in order to remove this outside influence over his future. In order to completely sever his tie with his father, he must first reject his mother, who represents the link between Simon and Stephen. In doing so, Stephen adopts a new significant mother figure in Leopold Bloom, who becomes a virginal woman who can, and does, bear children in Circe. Bloom’s ability to bypass the gender binary and become a woman serves as a bolster, rather than a hindrance, t...
James Joyce’s novel Ulysses applies the ambiguities of classical grammar and syntax to the English l...
At the beginning of Ulysses, Stephen Dedalus, who got back from Paris about a year ago to be present...
As a novel that asks how we can live in a world of uncertain values and urgent identity politics, Ja...
One of the most memorable episodes in James Joyce’s Ulysses occurs in the “Circe” chapter, when Leop...
“Ah, there’s only one man he’s got to get the better of now, and that’s that Shakespeare!” -Nora Jo...
Following Louis Althusser‘s and Slavoj Zizek‘s analyses of ideology, then, I want to explore the rep...
It is difficult to imagine a more elusive, polemical author than James Joyce. He is often spoken of ...
In forging Stephen Dedalus, a character central to James Joyce’s novel, A Portrait of the Artist as ...
Throughout James Joyce's novels, themes of freedom and entrapment prevail, as characters search for ...
Despite often being mislabeled as a \u27stream-of-consciousness\u27 narrative, recent archival disco...
Many critics originally attacked James Joyce’s Ulysses for its dark representation of gender relatio...
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...
This thesis examines the role of identity in James Joyce's Ulysses and Henry Roth's Call It Sleep. I...
James Joyce is noteworthy for his ability to elucidate different registers of consciousness through ...
James Joyce’s novel Ulysses applies the ambiguities of classical grammar and syntax to the English l...
At the beginning of Ulysses, Stephen Dedalus, who got back from Paris about a year ago to be present...
As a novel that asks how we can live in a world of uncertain values and urgent identity politics, Ja...
One of the most memorable episodes in James Joyce’s Ulysses occurs in the “Circe” chapter, when Leop...
“Ah, there’s only one man he’s got to get the better of now, and that’s that Shakespeare!” -Nora Jo...
Following Louis Althusser‘s and Slavoj Zizek‘s analyses of ideology, then, I want to explore the rep...
It is difficult to imagine a more elusive, polemical author than James Joyce. He is often spoken of ...
In forging Stephen Dedalus, a character central to James Joyce’s novel, A Portrait of the Artist as ...
Throughout James Joyce's novels, themes of freedom and entrapment prevail, as characters search for ...
Despite often being mislabeled as a \u27stream-of-consciousness\u27 narrative, recent archival disco...
Many critics originally attacked James Joyce’s Ulysses for its dark representation of gender relatio...
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...
This thesis examines the role of identity in James Joyce's Ulysses and Henry Roth's Call It Sleep. I...
James Joyce is noteworthy for his ability to elucidate different registers of consciousness through ...
James Joyce’s novel Ulysses applies the ambiguities of classical grammar and syntax to the English l...
At the beginning of Ulysses, Stephen Dedalus, who got back from Paris about a year ago to be present...
As a novel that asks how we can live in a world of uncertain values and urgent identity politics, Ja...