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Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2017) 63 (2): 220–227.
Published: 01 June 2017
...Patrick Bixby Irish Cosmopolitanism: Location and Dislocation in James Joyce, Elizabeth Bowen, and Samuel Beckett , by Pearson Nels . University Press of Florida , 2015 (paperback 2017). 179 pages. Copyright © 2017 Hofstra University 2017 Nels Pearson opens Irish...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2016) 62 (4): 359–378.
Published: 01 December 2016
...Teresa Winterhalter This article argues that although James Joyce’s Ulysses faces us with an overarching verbal complexity, we need not allow the insights into Leopold Bloom’s voicing grounded in Bakhtinian analysis to delimit the endpoint in exploring Joyce’s narrative technique. Stressing...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2005) 51 (4): 391–413.
Published: 01 December 2005
...Russell McDonald Copyright © Hofstra University 2005 m Who Speaks for Fergus? Silence, Homophobia, and the Anxiety of Yeatsian Influence in Joyce Russell McDonald O f the many loves that dare not speak their name for Joyce’s Stephen Dedalus, none remains more enigmatic...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2001) 47 (2): 197–216.
Published: 01 June 2001
...Charles W. Pollard Copyright © Hofstra University 2001 HI Traveling with Joyce: Derek Walcott’s Discrepant Cosmopolitan Modernism Charles W. Pollard Consider the following description as a question on a final exam in a course on modernist literature...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2002) 48 (4): 461–486.
Published: 01 December 2002
...Thaine Stearns Copyright © Hofstra University 2002 Ml The “Woman o f N o Appearance” : James Joyce, Dora Marsden, and Competitive Pilfering Thaine Stearns I have just re-read Episode III of “Ulysses.” My dear editor go down on your knees & thank your stars...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2017) 63 (3): 267–298.
Published: 01 September 2017
...Gregory Castle “The Consolation of Objects” takes seriously Nietzsche’s call to embrace what is, to love necessity. Amor fati for him entails the ability “to see what is necessary in things as what is beautiful in them.” Stephen Dedalus, in Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2011) 57 (2): 224–254.
Published: 01 June 2011
...Peter C. L. Nohrnberg Copyright © Hofstra University 2011 Peter C. L. Nohrnberg Political Economy, Tourism, and the Future of Ireland in Joyce’s Ulysses Peter C. L. Nohrnberg Writing to his brother Stanislaus from Rome in November of 1906, James Joyce expressed his belief...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2009) 55 (2): 232–254.
Published: 01 June 2009
...Carrie J. Preston © 2015 by Hofstra University 2009 Carrie J. Preston Joyce’s Reading Bodies and the Kinesthetics of the Modernist Novel Carrie J. Preston James Joyce famously described Ulysses as an “epic of the human body,” and many of his early and influential...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2000) 46 (1): 20–33.
Published: 01 March 2000
...Joshua Jacobs Copyright © Hofstra University 2000 Joyce’s Epiphanic Mode: Material Language and the Representation of Sexuality in Stephen Hero and Portrait J o s h u a J a c o b s ames Joyce’s transformations of themes, language...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2024) 70 (2): 149–172.
Published: 01 June 2024
...Paul Stasi Ordinary Culture in ‘The Dead’” reads James Joyce’s short story through the lens of Raymond Williams’s essay “Culture Is Ordinary.” Each work represents the gap between education and social solidarity in narratives about the return of an educated protagonist to his place of origin...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2018) 64 (1): 53–78.
Published: 01 March 2018
... of Wicomb’s narrative experiment. That experiment aims at recovering the residues of female subjectivity repressed by the antiapartheid struggle, while also refusing to reincorporate women as “subjects” of homogeneous history. By explicitly naming and engaging the experiments of Joseph Conrad and James Joyce...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2023) 69 (3): 293–328.
Published: 01 September 2023
...Graham MacPhee This essay challenges the dismissal of nationalist politics in readings of Ulysses by reconnecting the “Cyclops” episode to the aporias of modern political thought. Drawing from Joyce’s neglected notes to the episode, it relocates anticolonial nationalism within the diremption...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2017) 63 (3): 299–328.
Published: 01 September 2017
...Emily James This essay explores the inkblot as a modernist motif, from gothic children’s rhymes to the unlikely source material for Hermann Rorschach’s psychoanalytic measures. In the work of Virginia Woolf and James Joyce, the ephemeral trappings of pen and ink give rise to wayward, even...
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Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2008) 54 (1): 31–46.
Published: 01 March 2008
... Cheston Bennett, records that he drank Parisian tap water at least twice— just before and just after dining with James and Nora Joyce for the first time (156). Although little is known about the particulars of Bennett and Joyce s encounters in Paris, for Joyce at least, they seem to have been...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2009) 55 (3): 378–392.
Published: 01 September 2009
... of the year he had got himself a bad name” (137). Given the discussion that precedes Mr. Best’s remark, it is reasonable to assume that his mistaken attribution of authorship to Willie Hughes is not an error on Joyce’s part but another allusion to the theme, recurrent in Ulysses, of covert self...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2003) 49 (2): 164–192.
Published: 01 June 2003
...Jon Hegglund Copyright © Hofstra University 2003 m Ulysses and the Rhetoric of Cartography Jon Hegglund If that fellow was dropped in the middle of the Sahara, he’d sit, be God, and make a map of it. —-John Joyce, on his young son James (qtd. in Ellmann...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2008) 54 (1): 105–114.
Published: 01 March 2008
... and by the official censor created a “censorship dialectic” (3) that shaped the careers of modernist writers. In chapters on Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Bernard Shaw, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and Jean Rhys, Marshik offers incisive readings of both canoni­ cal and neglected texts, and reveals instances...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2007) 53 (4): 442–458.
Published: 01 December 2007
..., they seek to purge this oppressive spirit with the supposedly nonrational “musical” matter they would thereby free. As a consequence, discussions initially concerned with something like Joyce’s prosody quickly tend to focus on political and philosophical questions, particularly those associ­ ated...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2012) 58 (4): 720–727.
Published: 01 December 2012
... understanding of modernism. It is what James Joyce meant by “epiphany,” Virginia Woolf by “moment of being,” Ezra Pound by “magic moment,” and T. S. Eliot by the “still point of the turn- ing world” (qtd. in Olson 3). Olson does not wish to contest this reading but rather to qualify it by drawing...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2008) 54 (3): 410–417.
Published: 01 September 2008
... novels. In chapters on Joseph Conrad, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Kazuo Ishiguro, Salman Rushdie, and W. G. Sebald, Walkowitz develops what she calls a “critical cosmopolitanism,” one that reflects “on the history, uses, and interests of cosmopolitanism in the past” while simultaneously...