EXILE, BELONGING, AND IDENTITY IN JAMES JOYCE’S A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN (INTERNATIONAL STUDIES IN SOCIAL, HUMAN AND ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCES)
Yazarlar (1)
Öğr. Gör. Dr. Zamire İZZETGİL Kastamonu Üniversitesi, Türkiye
Bölüm Adı EXILE, BELONGING, AND IDENTITY IN JAMES JOYCE’S A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN
Kitap Adı INTERNATIONAL STUDIES IN SOCIAL, HUMAN AND ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCES
Bölüm Sayfaları 63-85
Kitap Türü Kitap Bölümü
Kitap Alt Türü Alanında uluslararası yayınlanan kitap bölümü
Kitap Niteliği Diğer uluslararası bilimsel kitap
Kitap Dili İngilizce Basım Tarihi 01-2023
DOI Numarası ISBN 978-625-6450-59-2
Basıldığı Ülke Türkiye Basıldığı Şehir Ankara
Kitap Linki https://www.seruvenyayinevi.com/Webkontrol/uploads/Fck/social1haziran2023.pdf#page=69
UAK Araştırma Alanları
İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı
Özet
The issues of exile, identity, and belonging are common themes in the history of English literature and have been approached by various novelists and contributed to the growth of fiction. The novelists, who notably faced problems with displacement, belonging, and identity, have produced masterpieces in which they emphasise their own personal and literary repercussions. In this sense, English-Irish authors like George Bernard Shaw, William Butler Yeats, James Joyce, and others turned their problems of exile, belonging and identity into aesthetic gains and memorable literary works. James Joyce is a twentiethcentury Irish literary critic, novelist, and involuntary intellectual exile whose literary works portray Irish society, oppressive institutions in the country, and the exiled lives of the Irish intellectuals who had to leave their homeland to attain freedom. Despite spending much of his life in self-imposed exile abroad, the author’s masterpieces were set in early twentieth-century Dublin and Ireland, featuring characters who experienced different forms of exile, including internal, external, and self-imposed. He expressed his deep sense of belonging to his homeland, Dublin, and Irish culture and society through his literary creations, which were produced with great passion and personal investment. Despite leaving his hometown of Dublin, Joyce remained devoted to writing about it, and his strong emotional connection to the city is evident in his statement to Arthur Power:“For myself, I always write about Dublin because if I can get to the heart of Dublin, I can get to the heart of all the cities of the World”(Ellman, 1976, p. 505). Therefore, it can be inferred …
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