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Original scientific paper

THE GRAMMAR OF DUPLICITY IN JAMES JOYCE’S “THE BOARDING HOUSE”

Robert Sullivan ; Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Mostar


Full text: croatian pdf 47 Kb

page 215-215

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Full text: english pdf 151 Kb

page 205-214

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Abstract

Compared with many of the stories in Dubliners, “The Boarding House”
has received relatively little attention. This is due perhaps to its apparent
“simplicity” when compared with the other stories in the volume. It is, on
the surface, an old story, the folktale-like tricking of the naive male by a
scheming mother and daughter. It is the purpose of this paper to demonstrate
just how sophisticated the narrative strategy really is, how the
“duping” of Bob Doran is best read against/within a series of other duplications,
or doublings, or counterparts, and through such a reading to offer
an explication of the sexual/textual politics of “The Boarding House.” In
order to do this I move from a broad consideration of the story in the context
of the volume as a whole to a progressively more particular concern
with narrative and language, ending with the grammatical interrogation
of one word.

Keywords

James Joice; Dubliners; Boarding house; duplicity and grammar.

Hrčak ID:

231866

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/231866

Publication date:

19.12.2006.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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