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Çѱ¹Á¦ÀÓ½ºÁ¶À̽ºÇÐȸ The James Joyce Society of Korea

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±¹¹®Á¦¸ñ "Circe" : Joycean-Deleuzian Chaosmos
¿µ¹®Á¦¸ñ "Circe" : Joycean-Deleuzian Chaosmos
ÀúÀÚ Cong Zhang ¡¤ Kelin Li
Ãâó 85-103
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³í¹®ÀÚ·á [÷ºÎÆÄÀÏ ´Ù¿î¹Þ±â] 4. Cong Zhang, Kelin Li.pdf

James Joyce, as a clinician of his nation, employs symptomatology to expose the problems of the Irish people, thereby attempting to cure the Irish national malady which he calls ¡°spiritual paralysis.¡± All his works can be regarded as such a remedy for this malady by way of enhancing the virtual power of an impersonal and nonorganic life, a life replacing the world of stagnancy and closure with a chaosmos of difference and becoming, and thus more possibility and vitality. In ¡°Circe,¡± this is achieved first through the becoming-woman of Bloom, which singularizes Bloom out of the Irish majority. With it, all of ¡°Circe¡± is involved in a block of becoming, disrupting all established logics and values so that Stephen Dedalus¡¯s denial to his mother becomes a denial to all authoritarian control. The affirmative power endowing on Bloom¡¯s becoming-woman then reconstructs ¡°Circe¡± as a chaosmos where all possibilities of life occur, in which a true liberation of the Irish people can be imagined. 

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´ÙÀ½±Û Anti-Hero as Promise of a Future New World: Interpreting the Image of Bloom in Ulysses