This article will position James Joyce’s novels A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) and Ulysses (1922) as literary works that are concerned with ecological issues associated with agriculture; here, this concern is traced through Stephen Dedalus’s awareness of land and animals beyond and outside Dublin. Specifically, Joyce frequently depicts the colonization of Ireland as centered on the control of nonhumans in the form of agriculture, which he brings into the novels’ political foreground. I will argue further that Joyce is equally critical of the violent nationalist rhetoric and insurrections of early 1900s Ireland, as a movement, which perpetuated the agricultural control of land. Joyce illustrates the violence of this agricultu...
My thesis analyzes James Joyce’s engagement with Catholic-nationalist Ireland’s (mis)understanding o...
Focusing on those animals that have been overlooked in reading Joyce’s work opens up new perspective...
In the present article, the role of nationalism and postcolonialism in James Joyce's Ulysses is expl...
At the end of the nineteenth century more than half of Ireland’s entire land surface was being used ...
Joyce’s Dublin is perhaps one of the greatest evocations of a multispecies landscape within the city...
This essay situates James Joyce within the competing discourses of Catholic theology, evolutionary b...
Since the Middle Ages, the Pale, an area around Dublin most subject to British influence, has been s...
In forging Stephen Dedalus, a character central to James Joyce’s novel, A Portrait of the Artist as ...
Few animals can be met through the works of James Joyce. An unnamed cat and threatening dog in Ulyss...
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, theories of the state increasingly grappled with the et...
If James Joyce l:ad written novels with largely rural settings, like many written by Lawrence and Fa...
Given how few animals appear in the stories of Dubliners and in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ...
This dissertation argues that James Joyce\u27s fiction is ethnographic. In Dubliners, Portrait of th...
This practice-in-research dissertation combines creative writing and literary criticism to explore t...
In James Joyce’s Ulysses, I believe that Stephen Dedalus enacts a heteroglossic discourse in episode...
My thesis analyzes James Joyce’s engagement with Catholic-nationalist Ireland’s (mis)understanding o...
Focusing on those animals that have been overlooked in reading Joyce’s work opens up new perspective...
In the present article, the role of nationalism and postcolonialism in James Joyce's Ulysses is expl...
At the end of the nineteenth century more than half of Ireland’s entire land surface was being used ...
Joyce’s Dublin is perhaps one of the greatest evocations of a multispecies landscape within the city...
This essay situates James Joyce within the competing discourses of Catholic theology, evolutionary b...
Since the Middle Ages, the Pale, an area around Dublin most subject to British influence, has been s...
In forging Stephen Dedalus, a character central to James Joyce’s novel, A Portrait of the Artist as ...
Few animals can be met through the works of James Joyce. An unnamed cat and threatening dog in Ulyss...
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, theories of the state increasingly grappled with the et...
If James Joyce l:ad written novels with largely rural settings, like many written by Lawrence and Fa...
Given how few animals appear in the stories of Dubliners and in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ...
This dissertation argues that James Joyce\u27s fiction is ethnographic. In Dubliners, Portrait of th...
This practice-in-research dissertation combines creative writing and literary criticism to explore t...
In James Joyce’s Ulysses, I believe that Stephen Dedalus enacts a heteroglossic discourse in episode...
My thesis analyzes James Joyce’s engagement with Catholic-nationalist Ireland’s (mis)understanding o...
Focusing on those animals that have been overlooked in reading Joyce’s work opens up new perspective...
In the present article, the role of nationalism and postcolonialism in James Joyce's Ulysses is expl...