Parallaxes : Virginia Woolf meets James Joyce /
Borrowed from optics, the concept of parallax identifies the apparently relative position of objects according to the lines of sight determined by the viewer's standpoint. This concept proves particularly useful in opening new insights into the work of two major authors of Modernist literature:...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Newcastle upon Tyne :
Cambridge Scholars Publishing,
2014
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Tracking a reader: what did Virginia Woolf really think of Ulysses? / James A.W. Heffernan
- A mediated plunge: from Joyce to Woolf through Richardson and Sinclair / Daniel Ferrer
- Ulysses' (C)rib: Joyce, Woolf, Wyndham Lewis / Flora de Giovanni
- Mapping the holy ground: the expansion of Irish Joyce reception in the nineteen sixties / John McCourt
- John Huston's intersemiotic translation of "The Dead": between sign and symbol / Marco Canani
- Spreading the Joy(ce): initial reflections on how Joyce & Co. should/might/could be communicated in a post-academic space / Laura Pelaschiar
- Stalking the subject, facing the animal: Virginia Woolf and the "anomalous" narrator / Rossana Bonadei
- Between naturalism and modernism: Virginia Woolf's literary impressionism / Ann Banfield
- Joyce's internal translations / Fritz Senn
- Modernist sex-change on paper: gender markers in Joyce's "Circe" and Woolf's Orlando / Oriana Palusci
- Translating Ulysses: how and why? / Enrico Terrinoni
- The translation of Joyce's poetry in post-war Italy / Sara Sullam