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完整後設資料紀錄
DC 欄位 | 值 | 語言 |
---|---|---|
dc.contributor.advisor | 曾麗玲(Li-ling Tseng) | |
dc.contributor.author | Shun-Yun Huang | en |
dc.contributor.author | 黃山耘 | zh_TW |
dc.date.accessioned | 2021-06-13T04:28:41Z | - |
dc.date.available | 2010-07-24 | |
dc.date.copyright | 2006-07-24 | |
dc.date.issued | 2006 | |
dc.date.submitted | 2006-07-20 | |
dc.identifier.citation | Works Cited
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White Mythologies: Writing History and the West. London and New York: Routledge,1990. | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://tdr.lib.ntu.edu.tw/jspui/handle/123456789/33193 | - |
dc.description.abstract | Abstract
This thesis investigates how Joyce achieves the formation of a nation in Ulysses with his handling of language and history. The first chapter offers a background survey of Irish cultural nationalism in Joyce’s time and his responses to it in his earlier works. Joyce repudiates his contemporary cultural nationalism for its tendency toward division and oppression, and seeks to create an alternative notion of nation which is able to accommodate the heterogeneous Irish reality. Chapter two examines how Joyce appropriates English and makes it speak in an Irish voice through his “mimicry” and “adulteration” of the colonizer’s language. Counter-teleological, de-centered, and rich in possibilities, the “Joycean English” is just the medium through which Ulysses engenders the “imagination” of an Irish nation. The third chapter begins with discussions on Stephen’s gradual realization and adoption of the “Contextualist” mode of history as a way out of the nightmare imposed by the “Organicist” historiography. Stephen’s strategy of narrative as counter-history is then complemented by Bloom, who with his inbetween and hybrid status is portrayed as the embodiment of possibilities and the hope for national liberation. Finally, with the infinite possibilities generated in Ulysses, Joyce is able to break away from the confinements of colonialism and give a close representation of the truly existent, hybrid Ireland. Ulysses is thus the novel that contributes to the formation of the Irish nation. | en |
dc.description.provenance | Made available in DSpace on 2021-06-13T04:28:41Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 ntu-95-R91122003-1.pdf: 495308 bytes, checksum: 023af3b78321741aabc0b60499b3ef4c (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006 | en |
dc.description.tableofcontents | Table of Contents
Abstract iv Acknowledgements v Abbreviations vi Introduction 1 Chapter One 9 Joyce, Ireland, and Cultural Nationalism Chapter Two 31 Language and the Nation I. “What possibility suggested itself?” 32 II. The Irish “ImagiNation” 55 Chapter Three 64 History and the Nation I. Stephen Dedalus’s Nightmare and Narrative as Counter-History 65 II. Leopold Bloom’s Nation and Hybridity as Alternative 89 Conclusion 113 Works Cited 118 | |
dc.language.iso | en | |
dc.title | 語言�歷史:《尤利西斯》中的國族建構 | zh_TW |
dc.title | Language/History: Formation of a Nation in James Joyce's Ulysses | en |
dc.type | Thesis | |
dc.date.schoolyear | 94-2 | |
dc.description.degree | 碩士 | |
dc.contributor.oralexamcommittee | 莊坤良(Kun-liang Chuang),蕭嫣嫣(Yne-yen Hsiao) | |
dc.subject.keyword | 喬伊斯,國族,愛爾蘭,交混,擬仿,後殖民,解放, | zh_TW |
dc.subject.keyword | Joyce,naion,Ireland,hybridity,mimicry,posticolonial,liberation, | en |
dc.relation.page | 125 | |
dc.rights.note | 有償授權 | |
dc.date.accepted | 2006-07-21 | |
dc.contributor.author-college | 文學院 | zh_TW |
dc.contributor.author-dept | 外國語文學研究所 | zh_TW |
顯示於系所單位: | 外國語文學系 |
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