Joyce's ghosts : Ireland, modernism, and memory /
For decades, James Joyce's modernism has overshadowed his Irishness, as his self-imposed exile and association with the high modernism of Europe's urban centers have led critics to see him almost exclusively as a cosmopolitan figure. In Joyce's Ghosts, Luke Gibbons mounts a powerful a...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Chicago :
The University of Chicago Press,
2015.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Introduction: "A ghost by absence"
- Text and the city: Dublin, cultural intimacy, and modernity
- "Shouts in the street": inner speech, self, and the city
- "He say No, your worship": Joyce, free indirect discourse, and vernacular modernism
- "Ghostly light": visualizing the voice in James Joyce's and John Huston's "The Dead"
- "Pale phantoms of desire": subjectivity, spectral memory, and Irish modernity
- "Spaces of time through times of space": haunting the "wandering rocks"
- "Famished ghosts": Bloom, Bible wars, and "U.P. UP" in Joyce's Dublin
- "Haunting face": spectral premonitions and the memory of the dead.