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Literature and Theology Advance Access originally published online on October 15, 2007
Literature and Theology 2007 21(4):417-436; doi:10.1093/litthe/frm035
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press 2007; all rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Mourning to Death: Love, Altruism, and Stephen Dedalus's Poetry of Grief

Gian Balsamo

Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University, 113 Sharia Kasr El Aini, PO Box 2511, 11511 Cairo, Egypt

balsamo.gian{at}gmail.com


   Abstract

Joyce writes Ulysses during the first two decades of the 20th century, first in Trieste and then in Paris. In this period two distinct concerns about the psychology of mourning flourish in Paris. The gradual publication of Proust's In Search of Lost Time promotes an interconnection between voluntary and involuntary memory on the one hand, and the psychology of mourning on the other. In turn, the anthropologists guided by Émile Durkheim devote several coordinated studies to the funerary rites prevalent among the aboriginal tribes in Australia. Joyce contributes to this cultural climate with the representation of Stephen Dedalus's sense of loss after the death of his mother. This essay discusses the relationship between Stephen's mourning and his poetic agenda, aimed at the poetic expression of inconsolable grief.


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