This paper will explore notions of female agency and assertiveness in the final chapter (‘Penelope’) of James Joyce’s 1922 modernist novel Ulysses. It will attempt to demonstrate how Molly Bloom transgresses traditional and expected norms of behaviour and thought for a woman living in the early 20th century. I will argue that Molly is in some ways an androgynous figure and that she approximates the male sensibility to a degree. Additionally, the study will illustrate in brief how she challenges women’s marginality in a male-dominated society and how unapologetic she is, and whether this is related to her sexual agency or otherwise. I will also be making brief references to other chapters, in relation to Leopold Bloom particularly, for compa...
The exegesis portion of my thesis examines representations of feminine masochism in 20th-century lit...
Language and its utilization can provide valuable information about individuals and their cultural n...
This paper provides a feminist criticism of Ulysses in an attempt to understand the relevance of Joy...
It is difficult to imagine a more elusive, polemical author than James Joyce. He is often spoken of ...
Many critics originally attacked James Joyce’s Ulysses for its dark representation of gender relatio...
One of the most memorable episodes in James Joyce’s Ulysses occurs in the “Circe” chapter, when Leop...
Accompanying poster presentation to the research paper of the same name.The century since James Joyc...
In this paper. I attempt to prove that obscenity as a legal concept is actually a moral judgment mad...
Despite often being mislabeled as a \u27stream-of-consciousness\u27 narrative, recent archival disco...
The article discusses the novel Ulysses by the Irish author James Joyce, and argues that he used s...
The century since James Joyce published Ulysses has been an era of incredible social reconfiguration...
To the uninitiated, the works of James Joyce can descend into endless and impenetrable obscurity, bu...
Literary historians such as Tony Tanner have speculated that adultery, with its assault upon the pat...
This study attempts to present Molly Bloom, the major fem.ale character in Joyce\u27s prose-satire, ...
In the first chapter, I explore the numerous mythic and discursive formations that represented Irela...
The exegesis portion of my thesis examines representations of feminine masochism in 20th-century lit...
Language and its utilization can provide valuable information about individuals and their cultural n...
This paper provides a feminist criticism of Ulysses in an attempt to understand the relevance of Joy...
It is difficult to imagine a more elusive, polemical author than James Joyce. He is often spoken of ...
Many critics originally attacked James Joyce’s Ulysses for its dark representation of gender relatio...
One of the most memorable episodes in James Joyce’s Ulysses occurs in the “Circe” chapter, when Leop...
Accompanying poster presentation to the research paper of the same name.The century since James Joyc...
In this paper. I attempt to prove that obscenity as a legal concept is actually a moral judgment mad...
Despite often being mislabeled as a \u27stream-of-consciousness\u27 narrative, recent archival disco...
The article discusses the novel Ulysses by the Irish author James Joyce, and argues that he used s...
The century since James Joyce published Ulysses has been an era of incredible social reconfiguration...
To the uninitiated, the works of James Joyce can descend into endless and impenetrable obscurity, bu...
Literary historians such as Tony Tanner have speculated that adultery, with its assault upon the pat...
This study attempts to present Molly Bloom, the major fem.ale character in Joyce\u27s prose-satire, ...
In the first chapter, I explore the numerous mythic and discursive formations that represented Irela...
The exegesis portion of my thesis examines representations of feminine masochism in 20th-century lit...
Language and its utilization can provide valuable information about individuals and their cultural n...
This paper provides a feminist criticism of Ulysses in an attempt to understand the relevance of Joy...