This essay focuses on the concepts of relationship to local culture, identity and third space writing found in migrant literature and explores their relevance to James Joyce’s Dubliners in order to support a migrant reading of the collection. James Joyce has already been read as a migrant writer; however, Dubliners has not been considered as being an important contribution to this mode of writing. In this essay, the postcolonial theories of identity, third space writing and relationship to local culture are used in an in-depth reading of seven of the stories in the collection which I argue are written in the migrant mode of writing. With an introduction given on migrant writing and the concepts used, the platform is thus laid out for a thor...
Although Irish writers were foundational to English-language modernism, Irish Modernism is a new fie...
Journeys abound in modern and contemporary Irish-language writing, whether the focus of the narrati...
More than a century ago, James Joyce published Dubliners, and since then, readers, scholars, and aca...
This essay focuses on the concepts of relationship to local culture, identity and third space writin...
The involvement of politics and colonization is a key element in Irish literature, and James Joyce’s...
This dissertation argues that James Joyce\u27s fiction is ethnographic. In Dubliners, Portrait of th...
Looking at the writing of three Irish expatriates who lived in Trieste, London, and Paris, Nels Pear...
This thesis sets out to examine James Joyce’s collection of short stories Dubliners. The introductio...
The short story of “Araby” by James Joyce was published in 1914 in Dubliners which is a collection o...
The city's image acquired special prominence in many literary works related to modernist literature....
The transition from the twentieth to the twenty-first century saw Ireland transformed from a homogen...
Since the Middle Ages, the Pale, an area around Dublin most subject to British influence, has been s...
Joyce's Dubliners is complex work responding to the political and social realities of post-Parnell I...
In the last two decades James Joyce’s art has been increasingly re-investigated in terms of its cult...
This collection of essays is a critical reexamination of Joyce’s famed book of short stories, Dublin...
Although Irish writers were foundational to English-language modernism, Irish Modernism is a new fie...
Journeys abound in modern and contemporary Irish-language writing, whether the focus of the narrati...
More than a century ago, James Joyce published Dubliners, and since then, readers, scholars, and aca...
This essay focuses on the concepts of relationship to local culture, identity and third space writin...
The involvement of politics and colonization is a key element in Irish literature, and James Joyce’s...
This dissertation argues that James Joyce\u27s fiction is ethnographic. In Dubliners, Portrait of th...
Looking at the writing of three Irish expatriates who lived in Trieste, London, and Paris, Nels Pear...
This thesis sets out to examine James Joyce’s collection of short stories Dubliners. The introductio...
The short story of “Araby” by James Joyce was published in 1914 in Dubliners which is a collection o...
The city's image acquired special prominence in many literary works related to modernist literature....
The transition from the twentieth to the twenty-first century saw Ireland transformed from a homogen...
Since the Middle Ages, the Pale, an area around Dublin most subject to British influence, has been s...
Joyce's Dubliners is complex work responding to the political and social realities of post-Parnell I...
In the last two decades James Joyce’s art has been increasingly re-investigated in terms of its cult...
This collection of essays is a critical reexamination of Joyce’s famed book of short stories, Dublin...
Although Irish writers were foundational to English-language modernism, Irish Modernism is a new fie...
Journeys abound in modern and contemporary Irish-language writing, whether the focus of the narrati...
More than a century ago, James Joyce published Dubliners, and since then, readers, scholars, and aca...