James Brudenell

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    Stephen Dedalus Themes

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    intellectuality and art with his set of philosophical principals called an aesthetic. Stephen Dedalus, the central character, acts as an alternate reflection of the author in this semi-autobiographical fiction A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce. Joyce primarily uses the early development of Stephen and the impact it has on his life to demonstrate his themes and ideas. He uses this, especially to demonstrate how Stephen arrives at his principals. Stephen has many interactions with the

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    Introduction James Joyce (1882 - 1941) was an Irish novelist and poet, considered to be one of the most influential writers in the modernist avant-garde of the early 20th century. In his early twenties he emigrated permanently to continental Europe, living in Trieste, Paris and Zurich. James Joyce is now known as one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. Even during his time, he was respected as one of the best writers of his generation. Still, his works were so experimental that he was

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    his need to help himself before others.He taught Doodle how to walk for his own selfish reason that he was “ashamed” of him (Hurst 468). This shows the reader that doing things for your own benefit can have a negative effect on you. Foreshadowing James Hurst foreshadows Doodle’s death in many ways.An example of foreshadowing in the story “The Scarlet Ibis” happens when the narrator says “One day I took him up to the barn loft and showed him his casket, telling him how we all believed he would die”

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    Gabriel: The hollow man of James Joyce's short story "The Dead" In James Joyce's short story "The Dead," the character of Gabriel begins the story confident of what he knows, and ends the story depressed, realizing he is a hollow shell of a man. The T.S. Eliot poem "The Wasteland" famously portrays a world in which all meaning is lost, and men are hollow and 'stuffed' with nothing of true substance. "What are the roots that clutch, what branches grow/Out of this stony rubbish?" asks Eliot in his

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    Irish holiday, has become the lasting legacy of Joyce’s most famous novel. On June 16, the day in Leopold Bloom’s life depicted by Ulysses, Dubliners eat the same meals as characters, and visit the places mentioned within the novel, set in Dublin. James Joyce became a prominent modernist through publishing only four major works, showing that those few writings contained a great amount of the best examples of modernist

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    and literary forebear to William James and the American Pragmatic tradition, James believed Whitman to be a far more problematic thinker than has been acknowledged” (526). Whitman is present in much of James’s writings, and The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902) in particular. That Whitman is “embodiment of a particular kind of metaphysical excess, at once unworldly and effeminate” (526). Examining the writings of the leading gay Whitmanites of his era, James traced Whitman’s influence—both

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    eventually these can eventually lead to mental illness in people. The protagonist of “The Jilting of Granny Weatherall” by Katherine Anne Porter, Granny Weatherall presents incoherent consciousness. Walter Mitty from “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” by James Thurber, has maladaptive daydreaming. Both stories are focused on mental illness, but each with a different cause. While the jilted and depressed Granny Weatherall gets mixed up with all her thoughts and memories from the past, Walter Mitty teased

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    To begin with, Joyce was not a woman. After Ulysses was published, many people thought that Molly was a prostitute because of her sexual frankness, but with time her thoughts were appreciated by her nuance. The problem then came with the arisen of the feminist criticism in the 1970’s, the debate started again. This is known as a big feminist moment in literature, but the truth is that, as some critics point out, sex and how we are seen by men is not the only thing women think at night, it may be

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    In the years prior to Thomas Jefferson's presidency, he was a very vocal critic of a centralized federal government and he was an avid follower of the constitution, yet once he became Commander in Chief he changed his tune towards these issues. The three largest contradictions that stand out amongst his actions were his war with the Barbary pirates, using restrictive economic policies to achieve his goals, and his acquiring of Louisiana. Although these contradictions were for the good of the country

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    DBQ # 2 Nationalism v. Sectionalism “Era of Good Feelings” The years following the War of 1812 became known as the “era of good feelings”. During this time you see the expansion of nationalism within the United States. It started mainly in the 1816 shortly before Monroe took office, and lasted until the end of his Presidency in the year of 1824. Before the “era of good feelings” there were certain events taking place that will lead up to this era. The first of these is the acquired land

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