/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-series-critical-propaganda-the-critics-and-joyc
be one of the most important and challenging novels in the English language as well as the most famous Irish novel ever written, James Joyce’s Ulysses is a 20th-century masterpiece. To mark the occasion [...] etc. — changed from the 1920s to the 2020s? These are all questions that inform the talks. They will also consider Joyce’s cultural, literary, and national impact, through the lenses of decolonization, gender [...] occasion of 100-years after its first publication, these renowned Joycean scholars consider the significance and continued relevance of James Joyce and Ulysses in the 21 st century. Can Joyce be read today?
/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-series-an-international-eyesore-ulysses-and-visua
/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-series-feminist-celibacy-and-the-marriage-question
/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-series-game-changing-homeric-memory
/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-series-garment-cultures-in-james-joyce
/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-series-introducing-ulysses-prof-dr-michelle-wi
/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-series-joyce-hypercanonicity-and-global-lit
/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-series-ulysses-a-borderland-narrative
/englisch/aktuelles/kalender/event/lecture-seriesdouble-mimesis-in-ulysses-prof-sam-slote
/ices/termine/abgeschlossene-veranstaltungen/ices-lectures/lecture-simone-varriale
belong. The latter stress self-resilience and Italianness as sources of distinction, but more frequently report exploitation and stigma in the context of insecure, low-status professional fields. The paper [...] ICES Lecture in cooperation with the Seminar for Sociology Vorlesen Dr. Simone Varriale (University of Lincoln, UK): The coloniality of distinction: class, race and whiteness among post-crisis Italian [...] unravelling the coloniality of distinction, namely how class helps more resourceful migrants to symbolically claim modernity and, implicitly, North European whiteness while displacing ‘race’ – in the forms of