The quest to “ascend through the roof and fly away to another country” (Joyce 43), in which a character can escape the entrapments of social constraints and craft a deeper sense of self, becomes a frequent narrative within James Joyce’s Dubliners and Alice Munro’s Runaway. Both short story collections represent female characters’ escapes and failed escapes. I compare the feminist quests portrayed in Joyce’s short story “Eveline” and Alice Munro’s stories “Runaway” and “Passion”, focusing on depictions of ‘escape’ and ‘quest narratives’ the various and dynamic ways in which female characters attempt to depart from crippling social expectations in search for self-knowledge and authentic identity. Escapes within Dubliners and Runaway vary, tho...
'Because she was a girl': Gender identity and the postcolonial in James Joyce's 'Eveline'Ye
This essay explores the gender implications of metaphor and metonymy in Joyce's Dubliners story «A M...
Female characters frequently appear as animals in the unstable universe of James Joyce’s a Finnegans...
My thesis explores the representations of women in the fiction of James Joyce through their roles as...
This thesis paper, entitled Gendered Spaces in James Joyce’s Dubliners, will explore Joyce’s use of ...
Alice Ann Munro, a Canadian short story writer and Nobel laureate (2013), is the author of sev...
This extended essay is an investigation of the protagonist female characters in both James Joyce’s D...
In A Bloodsmoor Romance, Joyce Carol Oates uses a parody of nineteenth-century attitudes to women to...
This article focuses on the motif of quest in contemporary Irish women’s short stories, in particula...
Our stories and the way in which we tell them are not only "self"-constitutive, but also constitutiv...
To the uninitiated, the works of James Joyce can descend into endless and impenetrable obscurity, bu...
87 leaves. Advisor: Dr. Grace EckleyThe problem. The series of fifteen stories progress from child...
Alice Munro’s 1978 collection of linked stories, Who Do You Think You Are? enacts what Lorraine York...
It is difficult to imagine a more elusive, polemical author than James Joyce. He is often spoken of ...
In this article, I propose to analyze female characterization in Dubliners (1914), by James Joyce, b...
'Because she was a girl': Gender identity and the postcolonial in James Joyce's 'Eveline'Ye
This essay explores the gender implications of metaphor and metonymy in Joyce's Dubliners story «A M...
Female characters frequently appear as animals in the unstable universe of James Joyce’s a Finnegans...
My thesis explores the representations of women in the fiction of James Joyce through their roles as...
This thesis paper, entitled Gendered Spaces in James Joyce’s Dubliners, will explore Joyce’s use of ...
Alice Ann Munro, a Canadian short story writer and Nobel laureate (2013), is the author of sev...
This extended essay is an investigation of the protagonist female characters in both James Joyce’s D...
In A Bloodsmoor Romance, Joyce Carol Oates uses a parody of nineteenth-century attitudes to women to...
This article focuses on the motif of quest in contemporary Irish women’s short stories, in particula...
Our stories and the way in which we tell them are not only "self"-constitutive, but also constitutiv...
To the uninitiated, the works of James Joyce can descend into endless and impenetrable obscurity, bu...
87 leaves. Advisor: Dr. Grace EckleyThe problem. The series of fifteen stories progress from child...
Alice Munro’s 1978 collection of linked stories, Who Do You Think You Are? enacts what Lorraine York...
It is difficult to imagine a more elusive, polemical author than James Joyce. He is often spoken of ...
In this article, I propose to analyze female characterization in Dubliners (1914), by James Joyce, b...
'Because she was a girl': Gender identity and the postcolonial in James Joyce's 'Eveline'Ye
This essay explores the gender implications of metaphor and metonymy in Joyce's Dubliners story «A M...
Female characters frequently appear as animals in the unstable universe of James Joyce’s a Finnegans...