Eliot, Joyce, and CompanyOxford University Press, 1987 - 326 páginas This study explores the relations of T.S. Eliot and James Joyce with certain antecedents, such as Dante, Flaubert and Baudelaire; with contemporaries including Pound and Yeats; and with their readers, in order to illuminate the authors' historic mutual venture in English literature. |
Conteúdo
3 | |
Tradition and the Individual Talent in Prufrock | 28 |
An OldIrish Ghost in Ulysses | 42 |
Dostoevsky Joyce and God | 49 |
CONTEMPORARIES | 85 |
Our Modern Experiment | 91 |
Ulysses and The Waste Land | 134 |
Joyce and Mann Citizen Artists | 195 |
The Adventures of Ulysses in Our World | 262 |
Works Cited | 302 |
309 | |
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achieved allusion artist assertion attitude beginning Bloom chapter character characterized coincidences conception concern consciousness context Crime and Punishment criticism culture decade declares doctrine Dostoevsky drafts dramatic Dublin elements embodies English essay evidence example Ezra Ezra Pound fiction final Finnegans Wake Fire Sermon formalist-cognitive function historical Hugh Kenner inference influence invoked Irish James Joyce Joyce's Kenner Laforgue Laforgue's language Leopold Bloom letter lines literary history literature Mann meaning mode modernist modernist literature Molly Molly's myth narrative nighttown Notes novel Odyssey original phase paragraph passage pattern phase of Modernism phrase poem poet poet's poetic poetry Portrait Pound precisely Prufrock published quoted Raskolnikov reader reality reference relation relevant Richard Ellmann romantic says seems sequence significant similar specific Stephen story style Svidrigaylov T. S. Eliot Thomas Mann tion Tiresias tradition Ulysses voice Waste Land words writers wrote Yeats York