A. After his exile, he only used one “voice” in his works
B. After his exile, he disliked the intricacy of language
C. After his exile, he never used split narratives
D. After his exile, he used a mixture of languages and linguistic traditions in his works
James Joyce
James Joyce
A. Thomas Aquinas
B. William Bradshaw
C. John Foxe
D. William Tyndale
A. commonness
B. boredom
C. backwardness
D. All of the Above
A. acatalectic
B. chiasmus
C. fantasy
D. pentameter
A. it is represented in a way that implies collective activity is needed
B. it reveals the sense of imprisonment that comes from routine
C. it reveals characters’ literal inability to move away from Ireland
D. All of the Above
A. it counters the sense of unrequited love
B. it is used only to disrupt the more prominent first-person narration
C. it makes the stories seem more impersonal
D. it breaks through the sense of paralysis
A. Thomas Aquinas
B. Augusta Gregory
C. Charles Parnell
D. Ezra Pound
A. a popular symbol of Irish nationalism
B. an Irish representative in the British Parliament
C. the founder of the Catholic Land League
D. All of the Above
A. the metaphor of Ireland as a novel
B. the metaphor of Ireland as a woman
C. the metaphor of Ireland as a child
D. the metaphor of Ireland as a soldier
A. the desire to show realistic forms
B. the use of traditional formal structure
C. the lack of interest in characters’ psyches
D. the desire to break with established forms