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9780521666282

Semicolonial Joyce

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780521666282

  • ISBN10:

    0521666287

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2000-07-10
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

James Joyce’s fiction constantly engages with an Ireland whose present and past is marked by the long struggle to achieve full independence from Britain. Semicolonial Joyce is a collection of essays addressing the importance of Ireland’s colonial situation in understanding Joyce’s work. The volume brings together leading commentators on the Irish dimension of Joyce’s writing, such as Vincent J. Cheng, Seamus Deane, Enda Duffy, Luke Gibbons, David Lloyd, and Emer Nolan, to present a range of voices rather than a single position on a topic which has had a major impact on Joyce criticism in recent years. Contributors explore Joyce’s ambivalent and shifting response to Irish nationalism and reconsider his writing in the context of the history of Western colonialism. The essays both draw on and question the achievements of postcolonial theory, and provide insights into Joyce’s resourceful engagement with political issues that remain highly topical today.

Table of Contents

List contributors
[vii]
Acknowledgments ix
Note on references to Joyce's works x
Introduction 1(20)
Marjorie Howes
Derek Attridge
Dead ends: Joyce's finest moments
21(16)
Seamus Deane
Disappearing Dublin: Ulysses, postcoloniality, and the politics of space
37(21)
Enda Duffy
``Goodbye Ireland I'm going to Gort'': geography, scale, and narrating the nation
58(20)
Marjorie Howes
State of the art: Joyce and postcolonialism
78(18)
Emer Nolan
``Neither fish nor flesh''; or how ``Cyclops'' stages the double-bind of Irish manhood
96(32)
Joseph Valente
Counterparts: Dubliners, masculinity, and temperance nationalism
128(22)
David Lloyd
``Have you no homes to go to?'': Joyce and the politics of paralysis
150(22)
Luke Gibbons
Don't cry for me, Argentina: ``Eveline'' and the seductions of emigration propaganda
172(29)
Katherine Mullin
``Kilt by kelt shell kithagain with kinagain'': Joyce and Scotland
201(18)
Willy Maley
Phoenician genealogies and oriental geographies: Joyce, language, and race
219(21)
Elizabeth Butler Cullingford
Authenticity and identity: catching the Irish spirit
240(22)
Vincent J. Cheng
Index 262

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