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Papers On Irish & Scottish Literature
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James Joyce’s “Ulysses” and Challenges to the Norms of Language
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This 8 page report discusses Joyce’s 1922 epic “Ulysses” and the
various events of a single day in Dublin in June of 1904, and the
focus on Stephen Dedalus, Leopold Bloom, and Bloom’s wife, Molly.
The report demonstrates the ways in which Joyce demonstrates his
ability to challenge both the norms of the English language as
well as the framework of the modern novel in terms of
consciousness and understanding on the part of both the story’s
characters and the readers of the novel. Bibliography lists 5
sources.
Filename: BWjjulys.wps
Jekyll & Hyde/Autobiographical Aspects
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A 5 page essay that makes the point that on the surface, there is little to connect The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde to the events that make up the life of its author Robert Louis Stevenson. Jekyll was English; Stevenson was born in Scotland. Jekyll was a scientist, a doctor; Stevenson a lawyer by education and a writer by profession, and, of course, the fundamental premise of the novel, which is that Jekyll transforms into Hyde, is in the realm of science fiction. However, if one looks below the surface and consider this work for what it says about Stevenson's Victorian mindset, autobiographical aspects begin to emerge. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: khjhst.rtf
John McGahern’s Literature: Ecocriticism
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An 8 page paper which examines the
literature of John McGahern from an ecocrticial position. The paper examines the
relationship between McGahern’s fiction and the physical environment and the
relationship between the protagonists and the landscape. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: RAecomc2.rtf
Jonathan Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels”
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This 6 page report
discusses Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) and his most famous work,
“Gulliver’s Travels.” It is the many distortions -- size,
attitude, beliefs, actions -- that serve as the greatest insight
into Swift’s story and the realm in which he presents the most
thought-provoking of contrasts. For example, the differences that
exist in the size of the Lilliputians, the Brobdingnag, and
Gulliver all have a relevant significance to the larger (pun
intended) story. No secondary sources.
Filename: BWsize.wps
Joyce & Yeats & Dublin
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A 10 page research paper based on the interesting proposition of what Yeats and Joyce might think of current day Dublin if they could return from the grave for a day. The writer discusses contemporary Dublin and makes suppositions about how Joyce and Yeats would react. Principally, the writer argues that they would be shocked by the equality achieved by women. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: khjoyyts.rtf
Joyce & Yeats /Irish Nationalism
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A 3 page research paper that considers the names Umberto Saba, James Joyce, W.B. Yeats, and Michael Collins. The writer argues that as this list progresses, the biographies of each of these writers/poets demonstrates that each of these literary luminaries were progressively more involved and active in the central cause of Irish patriot Michael Collins, that is, Irish independence. Umberto Saba, for example, has only a remote connection to Collins and the Irish cause, while Irish poet W. B. Yeats was actively involved in the cause of Irish independence. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: khsjyc.rtf
Joyce's Portrait of an Artist as a Man
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This 6 page paper looks at the infamous work and considers the thesis that James Joyce is a misogynist. The lives of the protagonist Stephen Dedalus and James Joyce himself are each discussed. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: SA212Man.rtf
Joyce/Araby
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A 5 page essay that looks at the plot structure and imagery of James Joyce's famous shorts story. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khjjar3.rtf
Love and Time in Three Poems of William Butler Yeats
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This 5
page report discusses the poetry of William Butler Yeats with a
primary focus on “Adam’s Curse.” In the vast majority of Yeats’
love poetry he is able to separate a clearly personal experience
and emphasize its greater universality in terms of shared emotion
and a tone of melancholy awareness that transfixes most people at
some point in the midst of their greater experience of love.
“Adam’s Curse” is not unique in its ability to express those
broad and often disturbing visions of the experience of love and
loss. Many of Yeats’ love poems also convey such sentiments and
“Never Give All the Heart” and “O Do not Love too Long” are also
examined. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: BWyeatad.wps
Mental Disturbance Of Francie Brady In Patrick McCabe's "The Butcher Boy"
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12 pages in length. If given the choice, Francie Brady would not have chosen the life path upon which he was so violently thrust. In fact, if given the opportunity early in life to develop into a normal, active and loving boy, Francie Brady would have very likely been an outstanding representation of just how wonderful children can be when guided by nurturing, devoted and right-minded parents. However, Francie Brady's life ended up the same way it started out: anything but normal. The equation of a suicidal mother and an alcoholic father set the stage for a boy who occupies equally the role of victim and victimizer as he struggles amidst significant odds to make sense of a life gone terribly wrong. No additional sources cited.
Filename: TLCButch.rtf
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