209,472 research outputs found

    A Study of characterization and representation in James Joyce's a portrait of the artist as a young man and John barth's lost, in the funhouse

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    Dissetação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e ExpressãoAnálise da caracterização e da representação do artista nos romances A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man de James Joyce e Lost in the Funhouse de John Barth. A análise destes romances quanto às diferenças existentes no modo de representação do artista, faz com que eles possam ser lidos, respectivamente, como representantes das narrativas modernista e pós-modernista

    "A Portrait of the Artist" as Artist: Herbert Read's review of Joyce in "Art and Letters" 1 (1917)

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    A re-discovery of a previously unknown review of James Joyce's "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man" by Herbert Read and a discussion of the importance of Joyce to Read and of Read's approach to Joyce through the visual arts in relation to the James Joyce Broadsheet

    Coping with Joyce: essays from the Copenhagen symposium

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    Essays from the Tenth International James Joyce Symposium held in Copenhagen in 1986(print) xviii, 280 p. : port. ; 24 cmIntroduction ix -- Abbreviations xvii -- MAJOR ADDRESS -- 1. Joyce's Heliotrope Margot Norris 3 -- 2. Joyce the Verb Fritz Senn 25 -- 3. The Joycead Colbert Kearney 55 -- 4. Inscribing James Joyce's Tombstone Bernard Benstock 73 -- 5. Joyce and Modernist Ideology Robert Scholes 91 -- CRITICAL STUDIES -- 6. Farrington the Scrivener : A Story of Dame Street Morris Beja 111 -- 7. The Language of Exiles Give Hart 123 -- 8. And the Music Goes Round and Round : A Couple of New Approaches to Joyce's Uses of Music in Ulysses Zack Bowen 137 -- 9. "Roll Away the Reel World, the Reel World" : "Circe" and Cinema Austin Briggs 145 -- 10. Images of the Lacanian Gaze in Ulysses Sheldon Brivic 157 -- 11. Jellyfish and Treacle : Lewis, Joyce, Gender, and Modernism Bonnie Kime Scott 168 -- 12. The Letter Selfpenned to One's Other : Joyce's Writing, Deconstruction, Feminism Ellen Carol Jones 180 -- 13. Simulation, Pluralism, and the Politics of Everyday Life Jules David Law 195 -- 14. Joyce's Pedagogy: Ulysses and Finnegans Wake as Theory Patrick McGee 206 -- 15. From Catechism to Catachresis : Aspects of Joycean Pedagogy in Ulysses and Finnegans Wake Lorraine Weir 220 -- 16. ALP's Final Monologue in Finnegans Wake : The Dialectical Logic of Joyce's Dream Text Kimberly Devlin 232 -- 17. Shahrazade, Turko the Terrible, and Shem : The Reader as Voyeur in Finnegans Wake Henriette Lazaridis Power 248 -- 18. The Wakes Confounded Language Derek Attridge 262 -- Contributors 269 -- Index 27

    Nyampa Aboriginal housing Company P/L, Menindee [picture].

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    Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-an11923827-8

    Annexe. Citation de James Joyce, Stephen le Héros

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    Joyce James. Annexe. Citation de James Joyce, Stephen le Héros. In: Sorcières : les femmes vivent, n°6, 1976. Prisonnières. p. 60

    Majorie Bowden

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    Majorie (Joyce) first visited Alice Springs in March 1964 and was enchanted with the rugged dusty surroundings. After marrying, in September, Anthony John Bowden she made Alice Springs her home. Working at the Alice Springs Hospital, in a nursing position, she was initially granted temporary status because she was married. Joyce commenced infant welfare training, without pay or sponsorship, she returned to the hospital to take up the position of district nurse. Joyce and her co-nurses often worked double shifts without days off hospital overcrowded and staff turnover was high. She also went on shift after hours on bush ambulance call outs and occasional Air Medical Service evacuation flights. Joyce lobbied for increased staffing, increased accommodation facilities for staff and the patients for better conditions. She was a founding member of the Royal Australian Nurses Federation, Alice Springs sub-branch, and played a pivotal role in the steering group which developed the initial policy and practice guidelines for the hospital. In 1970, after her first son was born, Joyce went back to work as acting matron in 1971 and assisted Margaret Borger in establishing training courses for assistants and orderlies. After her second son was born in 1972, she returned to work as one of the nurse educators for the new school and obtaining further unsponsored academic qualifications in nursing education. Joyce now a single parent continued hospital work until 1982 when she transferred to Community Health Services as Director of Nursing. She is a member of Northern Territory Road Safety Council and the Bindi Centre Management Committee.NurseEducato

    Attabom, attabom, attabombomboom! : Om Ebba Atterbom och James Joyce och den tidigaste svenska Joycekritiken

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    En presentation av den första översättning till främmande språk som gjordes av ett verk skrivet av James Joyce, Ebba Atterboms svenska version Ett porträtt av författaren som ung, utkommen på förlaget Gebers 1921, året innan Joyce kom att börja bli berömd genom publiceringen av Ulysses i Paris 1922. Uppsatsen innehåller en genomgång av översättningens mottagande i svensk press, en kortfattad levnadsteckning över översättaren Ebba Atterbom samt en analys av det ställe i Finnegans Wake (1939) där Joyce minns sin allra första översättare, eller i varje fall hennes lustiga namn – och roar sig med att i en pastischartad dikt låta både efternamnet och förnamnet ingå i ett par ordlekar.</p

    Lee P. Joyce, 1918.

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    Lee P. Joyce, 1918. Mr. Joyce was part owner of Jesse G. Bowen and Company, a dealer in pianos and organs.Source: Booklet, "Winston-Salem, City of Industry," 1918

    Letter from J.J. Joyce to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from [J.J.] Joyce P .P . V.G., St. Brigid's, Portumna, County Galway, to Hagan, introducing Mrs.[Hanny] who wishes for an audience with the Holy Father

    The treatment of family life and relationships in the works of James Joyce from Dubliners to Ulysses

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    PhDJoyce's treatment of family life and relationships reveals both a continuing concern with many of the same themes and a distinctive development from Dubliners to Ulysses. Throughout the works he is concerned with such matters as the nature of blood links, the tension between the needs of the individual and the needs of the family, and the quality of human affection, filial, parental, and sexual. While the early works, Dubliners, Stephen Hero, and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, present the family as a social institution of some importance, Ulysses shows it to be associated with universal principles of prime importance. Moreover, while the first three works present a largely unfavourable and somewhat restricted view of family life, Exiles and Ulysses develop extensively both the fundamental value of family relationships and the complexities of emotion and motive inherent in them. The early concern with the limitations of family life corresponds to similar concerns in contemporary writers whom Joyce admired, Joyce's declared intentions in writing his own works, and his somewhat unhappy experiences with his own family. The shift to a more favourable and more complex view of family life in the later works corresponds to his evident maturation and to his increased recognition of the value of his own family life. Thus Joyce's treatment of family life and relationships is central to his development as man and artist. While many critics have noted that the family is indeed important in Joyce's works, none has examined the subject systematically or treated many of the matters considered in this thesis
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