Mark S Morrisson
Mark S Morrisson
This article argues that Joyce's engagements with the Theosophy of the Dublin literary world amount to more than simple parody. In Ulysses, Joyce portrays Theosophy's efforts to offer an alternative understanding of physiology to that of th...
Menstruation in Ulysses [0.03%]
《尤利西斯》中的月经叙事
Katherine Mullin
Katherine Mullin
This article investigates James Joyce's fascination with a wide variety of medical texts, sexual folklores, religious beliefs, and persistent superstitions about menstruation. That fascination finds its way into Ulysses, which draws upon a ...
Vike Martina Plock
Vike Martina Plock
This article establishes Joyce's ongoing interest in psychoacoustics and illustrates how much he drew, in the writing of the "Sirens" episode, on nineteenth-century sound experiments that were developed by the German physician Hermann von H...
Eating and digesting "Lestrygonians": a physiological model of reading [0.03%]
吃与消化《莱斯特律戈涅食人 giants》:阅读的生理模型
Aida Yared
Aida Yared
In this article, I propose that, beneath a deceptively simple story-line, "Lestrygonians" functions like a living entity, one through which Bloom unknowingly traverses. First, there is Joyce's familiar Dublin, on a macroscopic level, and, s...
Skindeep Ulysses [0.03%]
皮相尤利西斯
Ariela Freedman
Ariela Freedman
This essay is about Joyce as an epidermist and Joyce as a chronicler and cataloguer of the "skindeep" surfaces of Dublin in Ulysses. The book is crowded with skins: tanned skins, blushing skins, skins enhanced by makeup and creams, skins ma...
Joyce After Flaubert: the cuckold as imperfect physician, the writer as physiologist [0.03%]
乔伊斯笔下的福楼拜:被戴绿帽者作为不完美的医生,作家作为生理学家
Valérie Bénéjam
Valérie Bénéjam
Although Joyce was not as familiar with the practice and theory of medicine as was Gustave Flaubert, this article argues that, through Flaubert's legacy, Joyce's writing was influenced by the French school of medical thought. Several aspect...