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  1. "A great poet on a great brother poet" : a parallactic reading of Goethe and James Joyce
    Published: 2014
    Publisher:  Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg, Frankfurt am Main

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title: In: Publications of the English Goethe Society : PEGS, 79.2010, Heft 3, S. 182-205; doi:10.1179/095936810X12790101593191
    Subjects: Joyce, James; Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von; Literatur; deutsch; englisch
    Scope: Online-Ressource
  2. "A great poet on a great brother poet" : a parallactic reading of Goethe and James Joyce
    Published: 2014

    The essay provides a contrapuntal "parallactic" reading of Johann Wolfgang Goethe's "Bildungsroman" Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre - with its extensions Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung and Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre - and James Joyce's high... more

     

    The essay provides a contrapuntal "parallactic" reading of Johann Wolfgang Goethe's "Bildungsroman" Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre - with its extensions Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung and Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre - and James Joyce's high modernist A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) and Ulysses (1922). Derived from astronomy, the term parallax designates, transferred to literary history, a narrative stratagem, a metapoetical rationale, and an interpretive method. Joyce employs it as a key concept and narrative tool in Ulysses to denote a stereoscopic perspective applied to the protagonists’ actions and the world they live in. Leopold Bloom thus refl ects on it and the technique of Ulysses is determined by it. On a higher plane, literary critics, too, engage in literary historical parallax whenever they read texts intertextually — as exemplified in this essay. A parallactic reading of the novels’ protagonists Wilhelm Meister and Stephen Dedalus, as regards not just their identification with Shakespeare’s Hamlet but also the symbolic connotations embedded in their names and mythological pretexts, allows us to shed new light on the roles and significance of narrative irony, chance, and paternity in these novels.

     

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    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    DDC Categories: 800
    Subjects: Joyce; James; Goethe; Johann Wolfgang von; Literatur; deutsch; englisch
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