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James Joyce
James Joyce and His Influences: William Faulkner and Anthony Burgess
W. B. Yeat's Presence in James Joyce's a Portrait of The
1. Introduction to Ireland (3 Credits) Instructor: Professor Kevin Whelan
The New York James Joyce Society
James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Arno Schmidt Friedhelm Rathjen In
“This Cemetery Is a Treacherous Place”. the Appropriation of Political, Cultural and Class Ownership of Glasnevin Cemetery, 1832 to 1909
THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY of AMERICA James Joyce and The
WB Yeats and Modernist Poetry
Essays on the Poetry of Trevor Joyce
More Music from the Works of James Joyce (Booklet)
Review Essay “A Gesture of Non Serviam”: Victorian and Twentieth-Century Writers in Revolt
Rereading Joyce's 'Oxen of the Sun'
Introduction: Medieval Causes
James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, and the Confines of Autonomous Language David M
James Clarence Mangan - Poems
UC San Diego UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Wilde and Joyce
Papers of Micheál Mac Liammóir
Top View
Patrick Pearse
A.J. [Con] Leventhal
Gendered Undoing Through Music in James Joyce's 'The Dead'
Essays on James Clarence Mangan This Page Intentionally Left Blank Essays on James Clarence Mangan the Man in the Cloak
Gaelic Revival, Irish Rising
Book Review: "Douglas Hyde, My American Journey" You Read That Right
THE QUESTION of IRISH IDENTITY in the WRITING of W. B. YEATS and JAMES JOYCE Ii the QUESTION of IRISH IDENTITY in the WRITING of W
Joyce Yeats and Revival
A. Joyce and Mangan Proofed and Set2
Description Read-Catholic-Emancipations-Irish-Fiction-From-Thomas
The Drama of Dedication and Betrayal”: Betrayal in the Life and Works of James Joyce
James Joyce's Literary Tastes Likes
Letters Between WB Yeats and James Joyce Feature in New Acquisition by the National Library – Minister Humphreys
James Joyce a Documentary Volume
Special Collections, LIU Post, Brookville, NY 11548 IRISH
Samuel Beckett's "Molly" Viewed As a Parody of James Joyce's "Ulysses"
'I Have Met with You, Bird, Too Late, Or If Not, Too Worm and Early': The
Joyce at Tara: the True Version of the Norman Invasion (Perhaps) by Bruce Stewart