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Interior Monologue: Direct vs. Indirect in the Works of Joyce and Woolf, Sintesi del corso di Inglese

Virginia WoolfJames JoyceModernist LiteratureNarrative Techniques

An overview of the interior monologue technique used by james joyce and virginia woolf in their literary works. It explains the differences between direct and indirect interior monologues, and discusses how each author employs this narrative device to present the characters' streams of consciousness. Woolf's monologues are characterized by a controlled perspective, while joyce's can be more unpredictable, with occasional narrator intervention.

Cosa imparerai

  • How does Joyce use direct interior monologue in Ulysses?
  • How does Virginia Woolf use the interior monologue technique in her works?
  • What is the difference between direct and indirect interior monologue?

Tipologia: Sintesi del corso

2017/2018

Caricato il 04/01/2022

francesca_berlingo
francesca_berlingo 🇮🇹

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Anteprima parziale del testo

Scarica Interior Monologue: Direct vs. Indirect in the Works of Joyce and Woolf e più Sintesi del corso in PDF di Inglese solo su Docsity! The technique used by Joyce and Woolf to represent it is called interior monologue: - Direct interior monologue refers to the direct presentation of a character’s stream of consciousness without the guiding presence of a narrator (such as Bloom's monologue in Ulysses -Joyce-). - Indirect interior monologue refers to the indirect presentation of a character’s thought filtered through the voice of an anonymous third person narrator (used by Woolf, for example in Mrs Dalloway). Woolf doesn't use the traditional omniscient narrator, but she takes the point of view of characters, speaking from within their minds, feeling and sensations directly. Woolf's monologues are never out of control, while Joyce’'s ones sometimes are, and in indirect monologues there is still the occasional presence of a narrator.
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