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  • Literature Online - Criticism & Reference: Full Text

    • Constituting a central plot line, the friction born out of Celia's work imperative and Murphy's willful subversion of it becomes a key narrative dynamic by which Beckett shapes and evaluates his characters, and by which he arranges the narrative episodes in sequence.
    • Murphy's struggle to stay unemployed, a struggle that once failed to engage the publishers has made little sense to critics who, up till now, have rarely probed the subtle meaning underlying the intense debate between Murphy and Celia over his job search
    • 31 more annotations...
  • Fifty Orwell Essays

    Orwell's essay on Miller's _Tropic of Cancer_

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    late modernism on 2009-01-13

  • Monika Kaup - The Neobaroque in Djuna Barnes - Modernism/modernity 12:1

    • The most salient characteristic of Barnes's work is an ornate, circular, obscure, rambling, hyperbolic style, a style which is non-communicative and transgressive, and which is the major source of the anti-realism of Barnes's work.
    • perhaps pure language is the real subject of her work
    • 8 more annotations...
  • Laura J. Veltman - "The Bible Lies the One Way, but the Night-Gown the Other": Dr. Matthew O'Connor, Confession, and Gender in Djuna Barnes's Nightwood - MFS Modern Fiction Studies 49:2

    "The Bible Lies The One Way, But The Night-Gown The Other":
    Dr. Matthew O'Connor, Confession, and Gender in Djuna Barnes's Nightwood
    Laura J. Veltman

    It would be nice to have a third gender to rest in now and then, wouldn't it.

    —Anne Carson (qtd. in Hainley)

    Djuna Barnes's Nightwood contains one of the more curious characters of modernist literature in the guise of Dr. Matthew O'Connor, an unlicensed gynecologist with a penchant for "talk[ing] torrentially" (xiii), as T. S. Eliot puts it in the novel's 1937 introduction.

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    nightwood o'connor on 2009-03-05

    • Dr. Matthew O'Connor, a figure—almost a
      second narrator
  • JSTOR: Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Summer, 2000), pp. 125-149

    # Looking the Part: Performative Narration in Djuna Barnes's Nightwood and Katherine Mansfield's "Je Ne Parle Pas Francais"
    # Author(s): Sarah Henstra

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    nightwood narrative on 2009-03-05

  • JSTOR: PMLA, Vol. 114, No. 2 (Mar., 1999), pp. 194-206

    #
    A Story beside(s) Itself: The Language of Loss in Djuna Barnes's Nightwood
    # Victoria L. Smith

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    nightwood language on 2009-03-05

  • Post Identity: Inappropriate and Dazzling Sideshows: Interpellating Narratives in Djuna Barnes's Nightwood

    Inappropriate and Dazzling Sideshows: Interpellating Narratives in Djuna Barnes's Nightwood

    Ann Kennedy

    quod.lib.umich.edu/...text-idx - Preview

    nightwood narrative on 2009-03-05

    • "Bow Down" comes closest to a realist style; this section establishes the repressive foundations of linear narrative.
    • The narrative requires, at each entrance into the arena, that we attempt to situate ourselves within the ambivalent desires of identification and innocence: the desire to see ourselves mirrored in the world and the threat of being "seen" in the world.
    • 10 more annotations...
  • JSTOR: Signs, Vol. 19, No. 1 (Autumn, 1993), pp. 177-200

    #
    The Erotics of Nora's Narrative in Djuna Barnes's "Nightwood"
    # Carolyn Allen
    # Signs, Vol. 19, No. 1 (Autumn, 1993), pp. 177-200

    www.jstor.org.ezproxy.lib.ucalgary.ca/sici - Preview

    nightwood narrative on 2009-03-05

  • JSTOR: Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Apr., 1972), pp. 93-110


    The External and Internal in Murphy
    S. C. Steinberg
    Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Apr., 1972), pp. 93-110

    www.jstor.org.ezproxy.lib.ucalgary.ca/sici - Preview

    murphy cartesian dualism on 2009-03-14

  • Literature Online - Criticism & Reference: Full Text

    Levy, Eric P: The Literary Depiction of Ontological Shock
    The Midwest Quarterly (46:2) [Winter 2005] , p.107-122,103.

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    beckett murphy on 2009-03-15

    • Here Nothing is more than merely absence of something(s), and is revealed as a reality - indeed the reality - in its own right. Explication of the reference, in this passage, to "the Aberderite" will clarify the ontological status accorded to Nothing. The Abderite is Democritus of Abdera, a Pre-Socratic philosopher (460?-370? B.C.) in whose cosmology reality comprises atoms colliding randomly in a void. In his view, the atoms and the void containing them are equally real: "Naught exist just as much as Aught" (fragment #156). But in the passage from Murphy, Beckett alters the Democritean view, such that Naught (Nothing) becomes more real than Aught (something). Nothing is construed as the primary reality. Nothing is real but awareness of emptiness. On the moral plane, the primacy of Nothing expresses the irrelevance of purpose.
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