An Intertextual Analysis of Sleep and Wake in The Thousand and One Nights and James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake

Abstract Through studying classical literature and cultures of various counties, especially Persia, James Joyce has created his everlasting novel, Finnegans Wake, whose narratives can never come to an end. He creates a kind of fascinating intertextuality between these two works by using quotations w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: لیلا برادران جمیلی
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: Shahid Beheshti University 2016-07-01
Series:Naqd-i Zabān va Adabīyyāt-i Khārijī
Subjects:
Online Access:http://clls.sbu.ac.ir/article/view/5787
id doaj-fc93339e206b44ab9789b0e889b0fa67
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fc93339e206b44ab9789b0e889b0fa672021-09-02T05:22:19ZfasShahid Beheshti UniversityNaqd-i Zabān va Adabīyyāt-i Khārijī2008-73302588-70682016-07-0110141571805137An Intertextual Analysis of Sleep and Wake in The Thousand and One Nights and James Joyce’s Finnegans Wakeلیلا برادران جمیلی0دانشگاه آزاد بروجردAbstract Through studying classical literature and cultures of various counties, especially Persia, James Joyce has created his everlasting novel, Finnegans Wake, whose narratives can never come to an end. He creates a kind of fascinating intertextuality between these two works by using quotations without any quotation marks and by interconnecting the Persian stories of The Thousand and One Nights with English stories and culture which involve the readers into a new verbal play of signifiers. This paper, by using the theories of Roland Barthes and Julia Kristeva and applying their theory of intertextuality, searches for the footsteps of The Thousand and One Nights in Joyce’s Finnegans Wake. Meanwhile, the paper shows that how the occurrence of events in Joyce’s novel follows the patterns of Shahrzad’s sleep and wake to lead Joyce’s characters away from their sleep or ignorance and moving toward wake or knowledge. Joyce designs a labyrinth for his readers, in his narration, which lasts many nights, even more than thousand and one nights, to enjoy and evaluate the patterns of sleep and wake. As a result of gaining the horizon of this new knowledge, his readers learn to interact and communicate with other cultures.http://clls.sbu.ac.ir/article/view/5787بینامتنیت-هزارویکشب-فرهنگ-روایت-شهرزاد-الگوهای خواب و بیداری
collection DOAJ
language fas
format Article
sources DOAJ
author لیلا برادران جمیلی
spellingShingle لیلا برادران جمیلی
An Intertextual Analysis of Sleep and Wake in The Thousand and One Nights and James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake
Naqd-i Zabān va Adabīyyāt-i Khārijī
بینامتنیت-هزارویکشب-فرهنگ-روایت-شهرزاد-الگوهای خواب و بیداری
author_facet لیلا برادران جمیلی
author_sort لیلا برادران جمیلی
title An Intertextual Analysis of Sleep and Wake in The Thousand and One Nights and James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake
title_short An Intertextual Analysis of Sleep and Wake in The Thousand and One Nights and James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake
title_full An Intertextual Analysis of Sleep and Wake in The Thousand and One Nights and James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake
title_fullStr An Intertextual Analysis of Sleep and Wake in The Thousand and One Nights and James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake
title_full_unstemmed An Intertextual Analysis of Sleep and Wake in The Thousand and One Nights and James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake
title_sort intertextual analysis of sleep and wake in the thousand and one nights and james joyce’s finnegans wake
publisher Shahid Beheshti University
series Naqd-i Zabān va Adabīyyāt-i Khārijī
issn 2008-7330
2588-7068
publishDate 2016-07-01
description Abstract Through studying classical literature and cultures of various counties, especially Persia, James Joyce has created his everlasting novel, Finnegans Wake, whose narratives can never come to an end. He creates a kind of fascinating intertextuality between these two works by using quotations without any quotation marks and by interconnecting the Persian stories of The Thousand and One Nights with English stories and culture which involve the readers into a new verbal play of signifiers. This paper, by using the theories of Roland Barthes and Julia Kristeva and applying their theory of intertextuality, searches for the footsteps of The Thousand and One Nights in Joyce’s Finnegans Wake. Meanwhile, the paper shows that how the occurrence of events in Joyce’s novel follows the patterns of Shahrzad’s sleep and wake to lead Joyce’s characters away from their sleep or ignorance and moving toward wake or knowledge. Joyce designs a labyrinth for his readers, in his narration, which lasts many nights, even more than thousand and one nights, to enjoy and evaluate the patterns of sleep and wake. As a result of gaining the horizon of this new knowledge, his readers learn to interact and communicate with other cultures.
topic بینامتنیت-هزارویکشب-فرهنگ-روایت-شهرزاد-الگوهای خواب و بیداری
url http://clls.sbu.ac.ir/article/view/5787
work_keys_str_mv AT lylạbrạdrạnjmyly anintertextualanalysisofsleepandwakeinthethousandandonenightsandjamesjoycesfinneganswake
AT lylạbrạdrạnjmyly intertextualanalysisofsleepandwakeinthethousandandonenightsandjamesjoycesfinneganswake
_version_ 1721179682347417600