The subaltern Ulysses /

Reveals that James Joyce's Ulysses can be seen as a guerrilla text written to resist colonialism.

Ngā taipitopito rārangi puna kōrero
Kaituhi matua: Duffy, Enda
Hōputu: Licensed eBooks
Reo:Ingarihi
I whakaputaina: Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press ©1994.
Urunga tuihono:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.ctttshkr
Rārangi ihirangi:
  • Introduction: Postcolonialism and Modernism: The Case of Ulysses
  • Mimic Beginnings: Nationalism, Ressentiment, and the Imagined Community in the Opening of Ulysses
  • Traffic Accidents: The Modernist Flaneur and Postcolonial Culture
  • "And I Belong to a Race ... ": The Spectacle of the Native and the Politics of Partition in "Cyclops"
  • "The Whores Will Be Busy": Terrorism, Prostitution, and the Abject Woman in "Circe"
  • Molly Alone: Questioning Community and Closure in the "Nostos."