MODERNIST TECHNIQUES IN A PORTRAIT OF THE
[2023-08-22 02:30:39]
"The History of Constantine University", "University Journal", "Letters and Social Sciences Letters", No. 2013 No. 4
"The History of Constantine University", "University Journal", "Letters and Social Sciences Letters", No. 2013 No. 4
"The History of Constantine University", "University Journal", "Letters and Social Sciences Letters", No. 2013 No. 4
"The History of Constantine University", "University Journal", "Letters and Social Sciences Letters", No. 2013 No. 4
"The History of Constantine University", "University Journal", "Letters and Social Sciences Letters", No. 2013 No. 4
[1] prose of Virginia Woolf, Volume 3, editor. Andrew Mike. Neillie, London, Hogarth Press, (1986-1994), p. 435
[2]. Prose of Virginia Woolf, Volume 3, editor. Andrew Mike. Neillie, London, Hogarth Press, (1986-1994), p 435-436
[3]. Jose Ortega y Gasset, "Humanization and Fiction of Art and Ideas", Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1948, p. 38
[Four]. Modernist novelist theorist, Deborah Parsons: James Joyce, Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf, Luturedege Critical Sinker, London and New York, 2007, page 15
[Five]. Kime Scott Bonnie, Gender of Modernity, Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1990, p. 16 [6]. Prose of Virginia Woolf, Volume 4, Editor. Andrew Mike. Neillie, London, Hogarth Press, (1986-
James Joyce 's "Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man" in the 20th century, Frans O'Brien's "Two Swims with Two Birds" and Modernism Writing is not an Attitude and Thinking of the 18th Century Of course, in the 9 th century, 200 years It is a long time allowed to change in the genre, but after gradual development as a form of novel, that change in the hands of modernism occurs quite rapidly. - James Joyce's "Alter Ego" as a portrait of a portrait of a young artist, citing the annihilation of Stephen Dadars, "James Joyce's Portrait of Young Artist" The same characteristics of many young James Joyce
James Joyce put together a novel and a short story in a small town in Dublin. "Dublin" published in 1914 is part of modernism literature as well as "portrait of young artists" and "Ulysses". Steven Dada Ross is a portrait and the central character of Ulysses. The latter was forbidden. The next important writer is Virginia Woolf, who is related to the group of intellectuals and writers who met the E. M. Forster and Leopold wolf at her home in the Bloomsbury group. Wolf tries to present a changing world by changing the way of writing. In 1915 she published her first novel called "Yuanhang", then in 1919 she appeared in "Night and daytime". Both books are realistic and take a serious attitude. The pressure of modernism in her writing began in her next novel, Jacob's room, published with Ulysses in 1922. The rest of the novels such as "Mrs Dalloway", "To Lighthouse", "Wave", "Orlando" all have the same modernism.
One of the techniques Wolf and other modernist writers used to explore the psychological time is a flow of consciousness. Wolf, Joyce, and Proust are often referred to together as the main representatives of modernist writers who use the flow of consciousness as a skill of their work. Consciousness flow is a term covering various technologies. Naturally, the flow of consciousness varies from author to writer. As I explained in the previous chapter, Wolf's view on the flow of consciousness and how it is used is quite different from Joyce's way of doing. In her essay, a modern novel, Virginia Woolf, commented on Joyce's "Ulysses" that appeared as a series in 1919's "Little Comments". Ulysses is an example of modernism, especially the flow of consciousness. Joyce's use of consciousness flow does not believe in Wolf: