This paper explores the way in which James Joyce (1882-1941) revives Ireland’s “first pop star,” Thomas Moore (1779-1852) in his collection of short stories, Dubliners (1914). In line with the theories of “the culture industry” and “taste,” which are respectively discussed in Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno’s Dialectic of Enlightenment (1947) and Pierre Bourdieu’s Distinction (1979), we will reconsider Joyce’s creative way of recruiting popular culture in the two stories, “An Encounter” and “The Dead,” both of which possess the haunting presence of Moore. In “An Encounter,” the old man (“queer old josser”) that the protagonist boy “encounters” at the end of the story refers to Thomas Moore, this being his favorite poet who was in fact ...
Constantine Curran was a friend of James Joyce's from UCD and also knew the later Joyce in Paris. Hi...
Roughly two-thirds of the way through Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners (1956), there is a section h...
This paper analyses the ways in which Leopold Bloom critiques Dublin city life from his position as ...
This paper explores the way in which James Joyce (1882-1941) revives Ireland’s “first pop star,” Tho...
My research is, as far as I am aware, the first reading of Dubliners as a specific and profound eng...
166 p.The figure of James Joyce is intangible, an almost all-encompassing figure whose height and br...
There are several hints in The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (2007) that Junot Díaz has been more...
This article considers how, and to what extent, James Connolly is represented in the works of James...
This thesis sets out to examine James Joyce’s collection of short stories Dubliners. The introductio...
James Joyce’s Dubliners is highly modernistic in terms of both content and form. This paper attempts...
It is easy enough to list the key dates in the history of Joyce's Dubliners, beginning in July, 1904...
This research seeks to read James Joyce’s Ulysses through Algerian eyes, with focus on its compariso...
William Shakespeare has led a rich and varied afterlife in Ireland. That this history documents the...
The involvement of politics and colonization is a key element in Irish literature, and James Joyce’s...
peer-reviewedJames Joyce told his friend Frank Budgen: “I want’ said Joyce, as we were walking down ...
Constantine Curran was a friend of James Joyce's from UCD and also knew the later Joyce in Paris. Hi...
Roughly two-thirds of the way through Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners (1956), there is a section h...
This paper analyses the ways in which Leopold Bloom critiques Dublin city life from his position as ...
This paper explores the way in which James Joyce (1882-1941) revives Ireland’s “first pop star,” Tho...
My research is, as far as I am aware, the first reading of Dubliners as a specific and profound eng...
166 p.The figure of James Joyce is intangible, an almost all-encompassing figure whose height and br...
There are several hints in The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (2007) that Junot Díaz has been more...
This article considers how, and to what extent, James Connolly is represented in the works of James...
This thesis sets out to examine James Joyce’s collection of short stories Dubliners. The introductio...
James Joyce’s Dubliners is highly modernistic in terms of both content and form. This paper attempts...
It is easy enough to list the key dates in the history of Joyce's Dubliners, beginning in July, 1904...
This research seeks to read James Joyce’s Ulysses through Algerian eyes, with focus on its compariso...
William Shakespeare has led a rich and varied afterlife in Ireland. That this history documents the...
The involvement of politics and colonization is a key element in Irish literature, and James Joyce’s...
peer-reviewedJames Joyce told his friend Frank Budgen: “I want’ said Joyce, as we were walking down ...
Constantine Curran was a friend of James Joyce's from UCD and also knew the later Joyce in Paris. Hi...
Roughly two-thirds of the way through Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners (1956), there is a section h...
This paper analyses the ways in which Leopold Bloom critiques Dublin city life from his position as ...