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Yeats, Joyce and Mother Ireland

Author : Kevin Oheix
Publisher :
Page : 20 pages
File Size : 15,17 MB
Release : 2015-01-19
Category :
ISBN : 9783656877950

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Essay from the year 2013 in the subject English - Literature, Works, grade: sans note, University of Rennes 2, language: English, abstract: James Joyce and William Butler Yeats are two major figures in modern Irish literature. Both are modernist writers who have experienced the transition through revolutions from Ireland as a colony to Ireland as a Free State and finally as a Republic. Their attitude to narrating the nation and the evolution of their style go hand in hand with the societal and political changes. At that time, there was an intense debate on Ireland's subordination, its relationship with England and its mythologies. This study explores the sort of link which exists between the authors' writings, Irish nationality, and nationalism. To what extent can Joyce and Yeats be said to write about the same Ireland while proceeding in a different way? How do they situate themselves in the process of nation-building? Irish nationalism was much debated during the literary revival up until the Post-Free State period. If it is true that it triggered tensions between those who supported it and those who did not, in the case of Joyce who excluded himself from the native tradition by exiling and Yeats who was static in the invention of a tradition, it is more complex. Both share a cultural memory but also possess their own individual memory in which modernism does not mean the same thing. It will be seen that they participate in the culture they criticize while remaining aloof from it and that the material they use to mount this critique is a form of refuge which at the same time is not directed towards the same goal.

Four Dubliners

Author : Richard Ellmann
Publisher : George Braziller
Page : 122 pages
File Size : 14,8 MB
Release : 1988
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780807612088

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Examines the lives and careers of four distinguished Irish authors and analyzes the connections among them.

Mad, Bad, Dangerous to Know

Author : Colm Toibin
Publisher : Picador Australia
Page : 300 pages
File Size : 14,32 MB
Release : 2018-10-30
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1760783595

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'A father...is a necessary evil.' Stephen Dedalus in Ulysses William Butler Yeats' father was an impoverished artist, an inveterate letter writer, and a man crippled by his inability to ever finish a painting. Oscar Wilde's father was a doctor, a brilliant statistician and amateur archaeologist who was taken to court by an obsessed lover in a strange foreshadowing of events that would later befall his son. The father of James Joyce was a garrulous, hard-drinking man with a violent temper, unable or unwilling to provide for his large family, who eventually drove his son from Ireland. In Mad, Bad, Dangerous to Know, Colm Tóibín presents an illuminating, intimate study of Irish culture, history and literature told through the lives and works of Ireland's most famous sons, and the complicated, influential relationships they each maintained with their fathers. 'A supple, subtle thinker, alive to hunts and undertones, wary of absolute truths.' New Statesman 'Tóibín writes about writers' families...with great subtlety and sometimes with splendid impudence.' Sunday Telegraph

Yeats and Joyce

Author : Alistair Cormack
Publisher : Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Page : 240 pages
File Size : 43,3 MB
Release : 2008
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780754660286

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Challenging characterisations of Joyce and Yeats as polar opposites, Alistair Cormack shows that Joyce and Yeats independently challenged a linearity and materialism they identified with empire and celebrated Ireland as destabilising the accepted forms of thought and the accepted means of narrating the nation. Thus, Cormack argues, 'unreadable' modernist works such as Finnegans Wake and A Vision must be understood as attempts to reconceptualise history in a literally postcolonial period.

States of Desire

Author : Vicki Mahaffey
Publisher : Oxford University Press, USA
Page : 295 pages
File Size : 16,63 MB
Release : 1998
Category : English literature
ISBN : 0195115929

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This study shows how the writings of Wilde, Yeats, and Joyce are politically subversive in the most local and dangerous sense of the term: they aim to take apart the assumptions and verbal practices that make dominance possible.

Terrible Beauty

Author : Patrick J. Keane
Publisher :
Page : 176 pages
File Size : 40,32 MB
Release : 1988
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN :

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Anglo-Irish Modernism and the Maternal

Author : D. Stubbings
Publisher : Springer
Page : 250 pages
File Size : 31,44 MB
Release : 2000-09-19
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 023028678X

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Anglo-Irish Modernism and the Maternal argues that a focus on the construction of mother-figures in Irish culture illuminates the extraordinary achievement of the Irish modernists. Essentially, the seminal Irish modernists - Moore, Joyce, Synge, Yeats and O'Casey - resisted those mother-figures sanctioned by cultural discourses, re-writing her in order to elude her. In this, they not only re-constituted language and representation, they accessed and re-figured their own creative selves.

Narcissistic Mothers in Modernist Literature

Author : Marie Géraldine Rademacher
Publisher : transcript Verlag
Page : 179 pages
File Size : 12,49 MB
Release : 2019-09-30
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 3839449669

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Narcissistic mothers are an important motif in modernist literature. Tracing its appearance in the works of writers such as D.H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf, this book questions the dichotomous image of either benevolent or suffocating mother, which has pervaded religion, art and literature for centuries. Instead of focusing on the mother-child dyad as characterized primarily by maternal domination and the child' s submission, Marie Géraldine Rademacher insists on the definitional nuances of the term »narcissism« and considers the political and socio-economic context of the time in shaping these women's narcissistic behavior. The study thus inspires a more positive (re)reading of the protagonists.

Irish Literary Portraits

Author : William Robert Rodgers
Publisher : Taplinger Publishing Company
Page : 264 pages
File Size : 40,11 MB
Release : 1973
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN :

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