副标题:无

作   者:

分类号:

ISBN:9780415491822

微信扫一扫,移动浏览光盘

简介

James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (1882?941) is a towering figure in the development of English-language modernist prose fiction. And his influence extends well beyond the anglophone literary world; like his alter ego, Stephen Dedalus, Joyce flew by the nets of nationality, language, and religion, and spent most of his life in continental Europe.T...   more 籬e significance of Joyce鈙 oeuvre鈖articularly the later and more radical prose works鈌ar outweighs the modesty of its bulk: only two books of verse, a play, one collection of short stories, and three novels (using that term in its most elastic sense) were published in his lifetime. But the combination of a modest output with an increasingly audacious experimentalism has generated interpretative and critical commentary on a vast and bewildering scale. Joyce attracted serious attention (not always favourable) from virtually every significant writer of the age: elder statesmen like Yeats recognized his importance, as did members of his own generation, such as Pound, Eliot, and Lawrence. The major American critics of the era, like Edmund Wilson and Lionel Trilling, and, in France, Eugene Jolas and Jacques Mercanton, also responded with enthusiasm to his work, as did Cyril Connolly and F. R. Leavis in Britain. Joyce鈙 work has also lent itself to approaches informed by contemporary theory鈝hether new critical, formalist, structuralist, deconstructionist, feminist, or materialist鈙uch that the development of Joycean criticism maps the spread and transmutations of 鈚heory?and illustrates its applications.So, while the prospective reader of Ulysses or Finnegans Wake is likely to feel a compelling need for some preparation before consuming the text itself, the daunting quantity (and variable quality) of Joyce criticism makes it difficult to discriminate the useful from the tendentious, superficial, and otiose. That is why this new Routledge title is so urgently needed. In four volumes, the collection meets the need for an authoritative reference work to allow researchers and students to make sense of the vast Joycean literature and the continuing explosion in research output. Users will now be able easily and rapidly to locate the best and most influential critical scholarship, work that is otherwise often inaccessible or scattered throughout a variety of specialist journals and books. With material gathered into one easy-to-use set, researchers and students can now spend more of their time with the key journal articles, book chapters, and other pieces, rather than on time-consuming (and sometimes fruitless) archival searches.Fully indexed and with a comprehensive introduction newly written by the editor, which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context,James Joyceis an essential reference work and is destined to be valued as a vital research resource.Available at a special introductory price. This price is applicable until 3 months after publication. For more information, please contact us (reference@routledge.com).   ?less

目录

PROVISIONAL CONTENTS Volume I Part 1: Encounters and Impressions 1. Stanislaus Joyce, 'The Soil', My Brother's Keeper (Faber, 1958), p. 27. 2. C. P. Curran, James Joyce Remembered (OUP, 1968), pp. 25-7, 28-31, 33-4, 35-6. 3. Oliver St John Gogarty, Mourning Became Mrs Spendlove (Creative Age Press, 1948), pp. 41-2, 43-4, 46, 48-9, 50-1. 4. Mary and Padraic Colum, Our Friend James Joyce (Doubleday, 1958), pp. 10, 11, 18-21, 35-7. 5. The Dublin Diary of Stanislaus Joyce, ed. George H. Healey (Faber, 1962), pp. 13-15, 29-30, 46-52, 103. 6. Alessandro Bruni, 'Recollections of Joyce', James Joyce Quarterly, 1977, XIV, 2, 160-63. 7. Frank Budgen, James Joyce and the Making of Ulysses (OUP, 1972), pp. 9-15. 8. Sylvia Beach, Shakespeare and Company (Faber, 1960), pp. 45-52. 9. Arthur Power Clive Hart (ed.), Conversations with James Joyce (Barnes and Noble, 1974), pp. 27, 28-9, 48-50. 10. Frank Budgen, 'Further Recollections of James Joyce', Partisan Review, 1956, XXIII, 349-54, 363-6. Part 2: Obituaries and Initial Assessments of His Significance 11. Neil Tomkinson, 'James Joyce', Adelphi, 1941, XVII, 175-7. 12. Eugene Jolas, 'My Friend James Joyce', Partisan Review, 1941, VIII, 2, 82-93. 13. Ezra Pound, 'James Joyce: To His Memory', in Olga Rudge (ed.), If This Be Treason (Tisp Nuova, 1948), pp. 269-71. 14. A. L. Rowse, 'James Joyce', World Review, Mar. 1941, 39-42. 15. Desmond MacCarthy, 'James Joyce', Memories (MacGibbon and Kee, 1953), pp. 113-17. 16. A. J. Leventhal, 'James Joyce', Dublin Magazine, 1941, XVI, 12-21. 17. B. J. Brooks, '"Shem the Penman": An Appreciation of James Joyce', Nineteenth Century and After, Jan.-June 1941, CXXIX. 18. T. S. Eliot, 'The Approach to James Joyce', The Listener, 14 Oct. 1943, pp. 446-7. 19. Stanislaus Joyce, 'James Joyce: A Memoir', Hudson Review, 1949, 2, 485, 486-90, 491-3, 495, 496-8. 20. Stuart Gilbert, 'The Latin Background of James Joyce's Art', Horizon, 1944, X, 57, 178-89. 21. Herbert Read, 'James Joyce', A Coat of Many Colours (Routledge, 1945), pp. 145-9. 22. Harry Levin, 'James Joyce', Atlantic Monthly, Dec. 1946, 125-9. 23. John Lehmann, 'Portrait of the Artist as an Escaper', Penguin New Writing 33 (1948), pp. 138-43. Part 3: Joyce and Ireland 24. Benedict Kiely, 'Rebels'; 'Townsmen'; 'Dreams'; 'Lovers and Creeds', Modern Irish Fiction (Golden Eagle Books, 1950), pp. 44-7. 25. Frank O'Connor, 'Antithesis-I', A Short History of Irish Literature (Capricorn Books, 1967), pp. 198-202. 26. Thomas Kinsella, 'Irish Literature-Continuity of the Tradition', Poetry Ireland, 1968, VII, 8, 109-16. 27. Raymond Porter, 'The Cracked Lookingglass', in McGrory and Unterecker (eds.), Yeats, Joyce and Beckett (Associated University Press, 1976), pp. 87-91. 28. Brian Moore, 'Old Father, Old Artificer', Irish Universities Review (Joyce Centenary Number), 1982, XII, 1, 13-16. 29. John Montague, 'James Joyce: Work Your Progress', Irish Universities Review, 1982, XII, 1, 98-103. 30. Seamus Deane, 'Joyce and Nationalism', Celtic Revivals (Faber, 1985), pp. 92-107. 31. Declan Kiberd, 'James Joyce and Mythic Realism', Inventing Ireland (Cape, 1995), pp. 327-55, 677-9. 32. Vincent J. Cheng, 'Nation Without Borders: Joyce, Cosmopolitanism and the Inauthentic Irishman', in Andrew Gibson and Ian Platt (eds.), Joyce, Ireland, Britain (University Press of Florida, 2006), pp. 212-29. Part 4: Joyce and the Forms of Fiction 33. Irene Hendry, 'Joyce's Epiphanies', in Seon Givens (ed.), James Joyce: Two Decades of Criticism (Vanguard Press, 1948), pp. 27-38. 34. Henry Reed, 'James Joyce: The Triple Exile', The Listener, 9 Mar. 1950, 437-9. 35. Ellsworth Mason, 'Joyce's Categories', Sewanee Review, 1953, 61, 427-32. 36. Thornton Wilder, 'Joyce and the Modern Novel', in Marvin Magalaner (ed.), A James Joyce Miscellany (James Joyce Society, 1957), pp. 11-19. 37. 'The Consistency of James Joyce', in Arnold Kettle and Boris Ford (eds.), The Pelican Guide to English Literature, Vol. 7 ('The Modern Age') (Penguin Books, 1961), pp. 301-14. 38. S. L. Goldberg, 'Symbolism and Realism: A Digression', The Classical Temper (Chatto and Windus, 1961), pp. 214-20. 39. Robert Glynn Kelly, 'Joyce Hero', in Thomas Staley (ed.), James Joyce Today (Indiana University Press, 1966), pp. 3-10. 40. Derek Bickerton, 'James Joyce and the Development of Interior Monologue', Essays in Criticism, 1968, XVIII, 32-46. 41. Weldon Thornton, 'James Joyce and the Power of the Word', in H. Harper and C. Edge (eds.), The Classic British Novel (University of Georgia Press, 1972), pp. 183-93. 42. John Paterson, 'James Joyce: It's All Won', The Novel as Faith (Gambit, 1973), pp. 107-22. 43. David Lodge, 'James Joyce', The Modes of Modern Writing (Edward Arnold, 1977), pp. 125-44. Volume II Part 5: Contexts, Connections, Comparisons 44. Vivienne Macleod, 'The Influence of Ibsen on Joyce', PMLA, 1945, LX, 879-98. 45. James J. Sweeney, Hudson Review, 1952, V, 404-8. 46. Marshall McLuhan, 'Joyce, Mallarme and the Press', Sewanee Review, 1954, LXII, 38-43, 45-5. 47. Daniel Schenker, 'Stalking the Invisible Hero', ELH, 1954, LI, 153-61, 162-74, 176-83. 48. Haskell M. Block, 'Theory of Language in Gustave Flaubert and James Joyce', Revue de Litterature Compare, 1961, XXXV, 197-206. 49. Robert Ryf, 'Joyce's Visual Imagination', A New Approach to Joyce (University of California Press, 1964), pp. 171-90. 50. Herbert N. Schneidau, 'Pound and Joyce: The Universal in the Particular', Ezra Pound: The Image and the Real (Louisiana State University Press, 1969), pp. 74-87. 51. Dominic Manganiello, 'Perspectives: Socialism and Anarchism', Joyce's Politics (Routledge, Kegan Paul, 1980), pp. 67-94. 52. Richard Brown, 'Love and Marriage', James Joyce and Sexuality (Cambridge University Press, 1985), pp. 12-49. 53. Margot Norris, 'Patronage and Censorship. the Production of Art in the Social Real', Joyce's Web: The Social Unravelling of Modernism (University of Texas Press, 1992), pp. 29-38. 54. Ronald Bush, 'Joyce's Modernisms', in J.-M. Rabate (ed.), Palgrave Advances in James Joyce Studies (Basingstoke, 2004), pp. 29-35, 37. Part 6: Letters, Non-fiction, Poetry, 'Exiles', Giacomo Joyce 6.1: Letters 55. Lionel Trilling, 'The Person of the Artist', Encounter, 1957, IX, 73-9. 6.2: Poetry 56. Robert Scholes, 'James Joyce: Irish Poet', James Joyce Quarterly, 1965, II, 255-70. 57. Francis Warner, 'The Poetry of James Joyce', in Benstock and Bashrui (eds.), James Joyce: An International Perspective (Colin Smythe, 1982), pp. 115-27. 6.3: Exiles 58. Francis Fergusson, 'Joyce's "Exiles"', The Human Image in Dramatic Literature (Doubleday Anchor, 1957), pp. 72-84. 59. Hugh Kenner, 'Joyce's 'Exiles', Hudson Review, 1952, V, 3, 389-403. 60. R. A. Maher, 'James Joyce's Exiles: The Comedy of Discontinuity', James Joyce Quarterly, 1972, IX, 4, 461-74. 61. John MacNicholas, 'Joyce's Exiles: The Argument for Doubt', James Joyce Quarterly, 1973, XI, 1, 33-40. 62. Marian Eide, Ethical Joyce (Cambridge University Press, 2002), pp. 40-8. 6.4: Giacomo Joyce 63. Henriette Power, 'Incorporating Giacomo Joyce', James Joyce Quarterly, 1991, XXVIII, 3, 623-30. 64. John McCourt, 'The Importance of Being Giacomo', in Thomas Staley (ed.), Joyce Studies Annual 2000 (University of Texas Press), pp. 4-26. Volume III Part 7: Dubliners 65. H. E. Bates, 'The Irish School', The Modern Short Story: A Critical Survey (Nelson, 1941), pp. 148-57. 66. Brewster Ghiselin, 'The Unity of Joyce's Dubliners', Accent, 1956, XVI, 75-88. 67. Anthony Ostroff, 'The Moral Vision in "Dubliners"', Western Speech, 1956, 20, 196-209. 68. Warren Beck, Joyce's Dubliners: Substance, Vision and Art (Duke University Press, 1969), pp. 20-30. 69. Paul Delany, 'Joyce's Political Development and the Aesthetic of Dubliners', College English, 1972, 34, 2, 256-68. 70. G. J. Watson, 'On Dubliners', Irish Identity and the Literary Revival (Croom Helm, 1979), pp. 166-79. 71. Neil Murphy, 'James Joyce's Dubliners and Modernist Doubt: The Making of a Tradition', in Oona Frawley (ed.), A New and Complex Sensation: Essays on James Joyce's Dubliners Dublin (Liliput Press, 2004), pp. 174-81. 7.1: Dubliners; Individual Stories 72. Helene Cixous, 'Joyce: The (R)use of Writing', in Attridge and Ferrer (eds.), Post-Structuralist Joyce (Cambridge University Press, 1984). 73. Allen Tate, 'Three Commentaries: The Dead', Sewanee Review, 1950, LVII, 10-15. 74. C. C. Loomis Jr, 'Structure and Sympathy in Joyce's "The Dead"', PMLA, 1960, LXXV, 149-51. 75. Vincent P. Pecora, '"The Dead" and the Generosity of the Word', PMLA, 1986, CI, 2, 233-43. 76. Brian Cosgrove, 'Male Sexuality and Female Rejection: Persistent Irony in Joyce's "The Dead"', Irish University Review, 1996, 37-47. 77. Margot Norris, 'Not the Girl She Was at All: Women in "The Dead"', in D. Schwartz (ed.), Case Studies in Contemporary Criticism (St Martin's Press, 1994), pp. 190-204. 78. Kevin Barry, 'In the Drawing Room: Classic Hollywood Narrative Style', The Dead (Cork University Press, 2001), pp. 54-66. Part 8: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Stephen Hero 79. Harry Levin, 'The Artist', James Joyce: A Critical Introduction (New Directions, 1941), pp. 322-5. 80. Kenneth Burke, 'Three Definitions', Kenyon Review, 1951, XIII, 2, 173-86. 81. Maurice Beebe, 'Joyce and Aquinas: The Theory of Aesthetics', Philological Quarterly, 1957, XXXVI, 4, 20-35. 82. Eugene M. Waith, 'The Calling of Stephen Dedalus', in T. E. Connolly (ed.), Joyce's 'Portrait': Criticisms and Critiques (Century Crofts, 1962), pp. 114-23. 83. Robert Scholes, 'Joyce and the Epiphany: The Key to the Labyrinth?', Sewanee Review, 1964, 72, 65-74. 84. Arnold Goldman, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: Disengagement', The Joyce Paradox: Form and Freedom in His Fiction (Routledge, 1966), pp. 22-50. 85. Maurice Beja, 'James Joyce: The Bread of Everyday Life', Epiphany in the Modern Novel (University of Washington Press, 1971), pp. 71-81. 86. Breon Mitchell, 'A Portrait and the Bildungsroman Tradition', in Staley and Benstock (eds.), Approaches to Joyce's Portrait: Ten Essays (Pittsburgh University Press, 1976), pp. 61-75. 87. James Sosnoski, 'Reading Acts and Reading Warrants', James Joyce Quarterly, 1978-9, 16, 43-63. 88. Charles Rossman, 'Th...

已确认勘误

次印刷

页码 勘误内容 提交人 修订印次

    • 名称
    • 类型
    • 大小

    光盘服务联系方式: 020-38250260    客服QQ:4006604884

    意见反馈

    14:15

    关闭

    云图客服:

    尊敬的用户,您好!您有任何提议或者建议都可以在此提出来,我们会谦虚地接受任何意见。

    或者您是想咨询:

    用户发送的提问,这种方式就需要有位在线客服来回答用户的问题,这种 就属于对话式的,问题是这种提问是否需要用户登录才能提问

    Video Player
    ×
    Audio Player
    ×
    pdf Player
    ×
    Current View

    看过该图书的还喜欢

    some pictures

    解忧杂货店

    东野圭吾 (作者), 李盈春 (译者)

    loading icon