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AuthorStević, Aleksandar
Available date2020-11-26T10:24:09Z
Publication Date2017
Publication NameJournal of Modern Literature
ResourceScopus
ISSN0022281X
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.2979/jmodelite.41.1.04
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/17068
AbstractWhile recent critics have often downplayed the significance of Joyce's attack on the Gaelic Revival in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, the novel actually enacts nothing less than a systematic repudiation of nationalist tropes from the position of liberal cosmopolitanism. As a detailed comparison of Joyce's text with the turn-of-thecentury revivalist discourse shows, A Portrait undermines each of the key revivalist preoccupations (including both linguistic nationalism and ethnic essentialism), finally deconstructing the project of nation building in toto. This radical critique of nationalism suggests that, after twenty years in which Joyce studies have been dominated by attempts to displace the once-prevalent vision of Joyce as an apolitical and internationalist aesthete with a version of Joyce as, above all, a colonial Irish intellectual, it is time to once again take his commitment to aestheticism and cosmopolitanism seriously. Copyright 1 The Trustees of Indiana University.
Languageen
PublisherIndiana University Press
SubjectA Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Aestheticism
Cosmopolitanism
Gaelic Revival
James Joyce
Nationalism
TitleStephen Dedalus and nationalism without nationalism
TypeArticle
Pagination40-57
Issue Number1
Volume Number41


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