From Balbec to Ballyba: Toponyms, Transportation, and the Etymological Imagination


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Type
Article
Change log
Authors
Dukes, HB 
Abstract

We are accustomed to reading modernist works in the light of actual cities, glossing literary setting as a somewhat faithful recreation of place. This tendency is not without cause: James Joyce famously boasted that if Dublin were to disappear, it could be reconstructed out of Ulysses. On the other hand, Virginia Woolf cautioned against the consolidation of map and territory, arguing that “we run the risk of disillusionment if we try to turn such phantom cities into tangible brick and mortar.” The examples to follow sever setting from the “experiential realism” of place, only to reconnect it to the built environment in novel ways.

Description
Keywords
31 Biological Sciences, 32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, 42 Health Sciences
Journal Title
Modernism/Modernity
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
2667-291X
Volume Title
3
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press