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‘You Seemed the Goddess Incarnate’: Echoes of Greek Mythology in Djuna Barnes’s Nightwood
Název práce v češtině: Jako bohyně ztělesněná: ozvěny řecké mytologie v díle Nightwood Djuny Barnes
Název v anglickém jazyce: ‘You Seemed the Goddess Incarnate’: Echoes of Greek Mythology in Djuna Barnes’s Nightwood
Klíčová slova: Djuna Barnes|Nightwood|řecká mytologie|modernismus
Klíčová slova anglicky: Djuna Barnes|Nightwood|Greek mythology|modernism
Akademický rok vypsání: 2019/2020
Typ práce: bakalářská práce
Jazyk práce: angličtina
Ústav: Ústav anglofonních literatur a kultur (21-UALK)
Vedoucí / školitel: Mgr. Miroslava Horová, Ph.D.
Řešitel: skrytý - zadáno a potvrzeno stud. odd.
Datum přihlášení: 04.08.2020
Datum zadání: 04.08.2020
Schválení administrátorem: zatím neschvalováno
Datum potvrzení stud. oddělením: 07.09.2020
Datum a čas obhajoby: 08.02.2022 00:00
Datum odevzdání elektronické podoby:17.01.2022
Datum proběhlé obhajoby: 08.02.2022
Odevzdaná/finalizovaná: odevzdaná studentem a finalizovaná
Oponenti: PhDr. Soňa Nováková, CSc.
 
 
 
Zásady pro vypracování
Modernism is marked by a series of radical creative departures, including the exploration of female desire and sexuality, e.g. in the work of Edna St Vincent Millay. The use of myth in general and Greek mythology in particular was key in the work of James Joyce and his magnum opus Ulysses but also for T. S. Eliot who, as an editor, was a prominent figure involved in the publishing of the novella that combines these two complex themes of sexuality and myth – Nightwood (1936) by Djuna Barnes.
The presence of Greek mythology in Nightwood has not received a great deal of critical attention. Situating Barnes’s work in the context of the modernist use of myth and relevant definitions of myth in general, this thesis will discuss the innate relation between sexuality, desire and Greek mythology and how, when combined, they contribute to the sub-narrative concept in Nightwood. The thesis will read mythical entities and their characteristics (e.g. Hecate, Demeter, Persephone, Tiresias, Agdistis, Artemis) and the bestial symbolism of various creatures (e.g. the phoenix, Cerberus and chimera) in juxtaposition with the protagonists of Nightwood, focusing on Robin Vote, Nora Flood and Dr Matthew O’Connor in particular, highlighting the aspects of gender fluidity and queer love and desire that are the driving force of this novella. In addition, the thesis will discuss a number of minor myth-related aspects of Nightwood, such as the symbolic role of Paris, and the performance of exile and metamorphosis.
Seznam odborné literatury
Barnes, Djuna. Nightwood, New York: New Directions, 2006.
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Eliot, T.S. “Ulysses, Order and Myth” (1923), in Selected Prose of T. S. Eliot, London: Faber and Faber, 2002. 177-78.
Fuchs, Miriam. "Djuna Barnes and T. S. Eliot: Authority, Resistance, and Acquiescence." Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature 12, no. 2 (1993): 289-313. Doi:10.2307/463931.
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Graves, Robert. The Greek Myths, London: Penguin Books, 2017.
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Silver, Morris. Slave-Wives, Single Women and Bastards in the Ancient Greek World: Law and Economics Perspectives, Havertown: Oxbow Books, Limited, 2017.
 
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