YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Literary Modernism in the Works of Virginia Woolf and James Joyce
Essays 151 - 180
In five pages Chapters 8 and 15 of Joyce's classic Ulysses are analyzed. One source is cited in the bibliography....
new life are fearful of such change, choosing to live the life they are accustomed to instead. Eveline is a woman who has dreams a...
In six pages these two short stories are compared and contrasted in terms of girls' roles in each tale. There are no other sources...
Verloc has used her brother, her foundation for understanding her husband dissolves and the two no longer are able to communicate....
each other often about literary topics as well as the war (Tender is the Night). It was during this time in France that Fitzger...
In nine pages this paper examines how war's compelling themes are depicted in the literary works the Bhagavad Gita and the writing...
In six pages this paper celebrates the life and literary works of James Baldwin in a consideration of his writings' enduring impac...
This essay consists of eleven pages and examines society's treatment of women in the female characterizations featured in the lite...
This paper examines Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Henry James' Washington Square in terms of how Szacz's The Myth of Mental Illn...
one of which he did not take advantage; Cooper appreciated all that was afforded to him. One of the most influential aspects of h...
In a paper of three pages, the writer looks at Jackson’s “The Lottery” and Joyce’s “The Dead”. Themes between the two works are co...
to a degree and ultimately comes to recognize that there is indeed a certain undercurrent of evil in the world. In doing so he de...
When she is speaking of the characters of Desdemona and Antigone, which is important to examine in order to compare to the charact...
age: "To her son these words conveyed an extraordinary joy, as if it were settled, the expedition were bound to take place, and th...
do no wrong, which makes her introduction to the novel somewhat gooey and overwrought. However, she does point out that Woolf foll...
can do no wrong, which makes her introduction to the novel somewhat gooey and overwrought. However, she does point out that Woolf ...
however, the lives of the fictional Frankenstein and the author of the book had many similarities. Both were treated as objects r...
this errand for herself rather than having someone do it for her. A few lines later we read "What a lark! What a plunge!" (Woolf 3...
respects ethics. Of course, that is not always apparent on the surface, but like much of his writings, Marx expresses a profound i...
that takes individual characteristics far from their origin but then allows them to flow back. At the same time, that identity fus...
that women are made to believe their worth is based solely upon their fashion sense. That women have been forced to prove their w...
As Burke notes for the process in general, Woolfs work exemplifies the fact that the symbolic means of rhetoric is directly associ...
"linear narrative and instead went to an interior monologue, or stream of consciousness, technique"(Virginia Woolf, 2003). Woolfs...
An androgynous individual relies upon social acceptance just the same as other more gender-specific people; when he or she receive...
both in regard to the societal events and circumstances in which Virginia Woolf was embroiled and in regard to contemporary societ...
(Woolf, 2002). Written for a largely female readership over a hundred years after Wollstonecraft, Woolf can afford to be more cri...
who thinks about her own weaknesses, yet also truly sees what she perhaps should be. We note how Clarissa, though strong and se...
cannot go when he obviously want it so badly. James feels that his fathers sarcastic rejection of the idea of visiting the lightho...
the stereotypical feminine behavior of Woolfs era. In order to be a journalist, Woolf explains how she had to kill "the Angel" and...
need for all women, especially of color, to assert themselves and claim their individual identity. This narrative adds texture to...