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Search Results for casement

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Journal Article
Novel (2014) 47 (3): 493–496.
Published: 01 November 2014
... an audience or win a competition. In The Poor Bugger’s Tool, Patrick R. Mullen points to an analogous form of queer labor at the heart of Irish literature and culture in the twentieth century. Mullen argues that the eclectic works he examines—by Oscar Wilde, J. M. Synge, Roger Casement, James Joyce...
Journal Article
Novel (2000) 33 (3): 424–431.
Published: 01 November 2000
... that although homosexu- ality is a persistent theme in Joyce's work, Joyce seldom gives it any prominence, and surely this, as well as the "compulsory heterosexuality" of Joycean criticism, has led to the rela- tive silence on the topic. Sometimes the strain shows, as when Robert Caserio, in "Casement...
Journal Article
Novel (2009) 42 (1): iii–iv.
Published: 01 May 2009
.... patrick mullen is assistant professor of English at Northeastern University. He has published arti- cles on Joseph Conrad, James Joyce, and Roger Casement and recently completed a book manuscript titled “The Poor Bugger’s Tool: Irish Modernism, Queer Labor, and Postcolonial History.” zarena aslami...
Journal Article
Novel (2000) 33 (3): 353–376.
Published: 01 November 2000
.... In order to consider how these anxious ethical encounters shape the narrative trajectory of Shelley's text, I want to turn to the two, nearly identical, "casement scenes" which together evince the text's iterative ethos, its tendency to reproduce stylized and recurrent moments of ethical reckoning...
Journal Article
Novel (2006) 39 (3): 402–420.
Published: 01 November 2006
... and bed-stead, with a coverlet and aiz old blue curtain, which was fixed to the side ofthe bedstead; adjoining to the casement, a white-washed wall served to keep the wlnd from intrudzng upon the privacy of the reposed gentleman on the other side, and also to receive that which some...
Journal Article
Novel (2015) 48 (3): 421–445.
Published: 01 November 2015
... thrown back; and, with a sensation of horror not to be described, I saw at the open window a figure the most hideous and abhorred. A grin was on the face of the monster; he seemed to jeer, as with his fiendish finger he pointed towards the corpse of my wife. (136) Framed by the casement...
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