...By the opening of Ulysses, Stephen’s romantic sensibilities seem to be severely weakened. (Michael Schandorf) the whole boo is narrowed down to events in Dublin on June 16, 1904. Ordinary people carrying an everyday tasks consume its subjects. Ulysses is a book about Stephen’s search for a symbolic father and blooms search for a son. Stephen a poor school teacher, lives in a 1 room tower and ears nothing all day. He thinks he may have killed his mother by refusing to kneel and pray at her deathbed when she asked. He associates the phase” remorse at conscience”, with his guilt over his mother’s death. Bloom shows a number of acts, not having had intercourse with his wife for over ten years. Bloom shows acts of masturbation. On the other hand bloom showers acts of admirable qualities. He is a sensitive and considerate man, a man of wide-ranging interests and inveterate curiosity, of sympathy and charity…a good man. (Weldon Thorton) bloom too has guilty feelings about his father because he no longer observes certain traditions his father observed. It is bloom’s extraordinary capacity for sympathy and compassion that allows him heroism in the course of the novel. Bloom’s ability to empathize with a wide variety of beings, cats ,birds, dead men, vicious men, blind men, old ladies, the poor ,and so on. Bloom’s compassion dictates the course of his day, like when he stops at the river to feed the gulls or at the hospital to check on Mrs. Purfoy. Bloom leaves hoe this morning, buys himself...
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...Autobiography and Consciousness in Ulysses There are at least two factors in Ulysses[1], which are Joyce’s autobiographical elements in the novel and stream of consciousness writing in the passages. In the novel Joyce described a number of scenes based on his personal story and it is possible to decide that Stephen Dedalus who is one of the protagonists in Ulysses is the other self of the author. It is considered that stream of consciousness writing is exerted all through the novel to write the interior minds of characters. In the episode 1, Telemachus,[2] it is revealed that Stephen did not kneel down and pray for his dying mother when she asked him to do so, and actually Joyce himself did not pray for his mother when she is dying although she asked him to kneel and pray for her, since Joyce was an agnostic thinker. Stephen thinks whether he should have prayed for his mother or not and he is distress by meditation on his mother. Her [Stephen’s mother] grazing eyes, staring out of death, to shake and bend my soul. […] Her eyes on me to strike me down. Liliata rutilantium te confessorum turma circumdet : iubilantium te virginum chorus excipiat.[3] Ghoul! Chewer of corpses! No, mother. Let me be and let me live.[4] Stephen is obsessed with the image of his mother and he feels as if the ghost of her is gazing at him. He is thinking seriously about whether he should have chosen his agnosticism or his affection for his mother. In this scene, Joyce suggested the...
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...,The Presentation of male and female sexuality in Nabokov’s ‘Lolita’, Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’ and Carol Ann Duffy’s poetry anthology ‘The World’s Wife’ The themes of sex and sexuality have always remained somewhat hidden by society, concealing a darker unspoken reality which has power to threaten the pure and romantic values of marriage and intimate relationships as well as established gender roles. Despite the alleviation of religious and moral restrictions, sex embodies the warped animal reflection of the exclusively human concept of love, exposing primal desires and ensuring its continued belonging to the realms of the shocking and distasteful, while inadvertently strengthening its power. It is this power that lies at the heart of much modernist literature. The illicit imagery serves as a physical subversion of the dated foundations the writings oppose. Prominent in early modernist work was the theoretical influence of Sigmund Freud, most notably in the case of contemporary writer James Joyce whose literary techniques, such as the stream of consciousness writing in Ulysses, have come to epitomize modernist fiction. Ulysses not only challenges the censors’ attitude to sex, but also what were considered the sexual norms for men and women in pre-war Catholic society. Similarly, Vladimir Nabokov uses sexual deviancy to protest the theoretical ideas implicit in modernist literature through characteristics derived from post-World War II civilisation. The absence of structure or...
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...Page 1 Ulysses S. Grant (2002) Program Transcript Part One Narrator: October 23, 1863. Chattanooga, Tennessee. After a grueling four-day journey, General Ulysses S. Grant arrived at Union headquarters. He had injured his leg and had to be helped off his horse. Once again, he was dogged by rumors that he'd been drinking. He listened silently as his officers described a bleak situation. The Union Army was surrounded. Men and horses faced starvation. A Confederate victory seemed inevitable. Grant thanked his men, and began to write his orders. Max Byrd, Novelist: You see a lot of Grant in just that act of writing. The concentration and the determination. He never looked up. He never hesitated. He never seemed to search for a word. Geoffrey Perr et, Biographer: By the time he'd finished, he was surrounded by pieces of, of paper that he'd covered with his, his very even hand writing. In effect, he had fought the battle already in his o wn mind. Narrator: Before the war, Grant had been a nobody, a failure as a farmer and a businessman. As Commanding General, he was called an incompetent, a butcher. But he would win every campaign he ever fought. His plain, Midwestern w ays would captivate the American people. David W. Blight, Historian: There was something about that element of the American dream of that rags to riches story. He had experienced humiliation and he had understood failure. And I suspect a lot of Americans could see themselves in him. Donald Miller, Historian: Grant...
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...The book “Ulysses S. Grant” is strictly a biography written by Steven O’Brien and published by Chelsea House Publishing in 1991. The author writes about Grant's life from his early age to his death. Steven O’Brien includes a detailed analysis of every event that impacted and changed Grant’s life, describing it in an organized and cohesive manner. Grant was not always a man of success and the author does a fair job of showing Grant’s achievements as well as failures because no man is perfect after all. The book presents old information in an interesting fashion, it is great for people that want to learn facts about the life of the 18th President of the United States and develop their own idea about who Ulysses S. Grant was. The author, Steven...
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...Hades The sixth episode of James Joyce’s Ulysses is based around Leopold Bloom’s thoughts and actions throughout the time before, during, and shortly after the funeral of Paddy Dignam. In R.M Adams’ essay, “Hades: Bloom Alone”, he discusses a “great hollow resonance” (96) that is present when reading this episode and Adams claims “that is the real development of this chapter, the sounding of that resonance, the deepening and darkening in Bloom’s mind of an immense emptiness.” (96,97) Throughout the episode, it is clear to see the isolation between Bloom and the rest of the characters presented. On the carriage ride to the funeral, Joyce makes it clear that the thoughts of Cunningham, Power, and Simon Dedalus are completely different from the thoughts of Bloom. Adams writes that Bloom’s “matter-of-factness often serves to set him apart from his companions.” (98) This is clear when Bloom speaks out that he would rather prefer a quick death than a slow death. Bloom, being Jewish, does not seem to take into account that Catholics fear a quick death as it does not offer a chance to repent. This conversation leads into Mr. Power, unaware of the suicide of Bloom’s father, speaking about the disgrace of having a suicide in the family. It is obvious to see that Bloom is not close to these people and that they have no intentions of being so. However, Adams writes that “Deeper than any of these on-the-whole trivial misadventures, there is the gloomy emptiness of Bloom’s encounter...
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...Ulysses S. Grant So his name is Ulysses S. Grant. But that’s not his original name. His real name is Hiram Ulysses Grant. His “S” doesn’t mean anything. He was born in Point Pleasant Ohio and he is a Methodist. If you don’t know what that is, it is a movement of Protestant Christianity represented by a number of denominations and organizations, claiming a total of approximately seventy million adherents worldwide. By seven or eight, he could handle a team of horses. His father obtained an appointment for him to U.S. Academy at West Point. He is the eldest son of Jesse Root Grant and Hannah Simpson Grant. He loved horses. He was good at math and drawing. Years later in 1843, Grant received commission as Brevet 2nd lieutenant. He was in Texas when the war with Mexico broke in 1846. He resigned from the army in 1854 but then in 1864, he was a lieutenant general and had been appointed by President Abraham Lincoln to command all of the Union Armies in the Civil War. In 1848, he got married to Julia Dent and had 4 kids, Fredrick Dent, Ulysses Simpson, Ellen Wrenshall, and Jesse Root. In December 1860, South Carolina seceded from the union states other states soon followed by southern states and which they formed the Confederate States of America. On April 13, 1861, Fort Sumter fell. Two days after, Lincoln called for 75,000 volunteers for the Army. In August of 1861, Grant read in the newspapers to see that Lincoln ranked him up to Brigadier General. In April 9, 1865, General Robert...
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...Ulysses S Grant: An American Hero Shreya Joshi Social Studies Mr. Nieskens May 27, 2014 In the 1800’s, the United States was a growing and thriving nation. In the South, many plantations were producing mass amounts of cotton. To keep up with the cotton demand, plantation owners bought more slaves to grow and harvest the cotton. The cotton and slave industry’s blossomed because of Eli Whitney’s cotton gin (Cayton et al 274). By 1850, the country had conflicting views because slavery became a growing issue. In fact, the main reason for the Union separating was over slavery being illegal or not. The Union broke up under Lincoln’s presidency when South Carolina seceded from the Union on December 20, 1860 (371). The upper South seceded as well and founded a new country called The Confederate States of America, or the Confederacy. The war begins after they secede. Born Hiram Ulysses Grant, he led the Union to victory in the Civil War and wrote a heroic legacy. Grant fought in the Mexican and Civil wars. At the age of 15, he applied to West Point Military Academy and was barely accepted (Rickarby 6). Due to his background with working with horses, he was an excellent cavalryman. While in the army, he was promoted quickly. For a short period of time, Grant quit the army, yet regretted quickly. He failed at everything he tried before rejoining the army, proving he was meant for the army (Simon 6). He had written an incredible military history, which led him to have a successful...
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...When Ulysses S. Grant was elected, it was during the Reconstruction era after the Civil War. Grant being a beloved war hero was setup for success by a republican controlled congress which he had a strong connection with. His domestic and foreign policy although not widely successful would shape our country in the years following his presidency. Grant had decided to rebuild the South instead of punish them for their actions during war. However, Grant struggled due to the fact he now had to balance reconstruction with the protection of the newly freed African American community. While initially successful, he quickly met harsh resistance and often had to use the army and federal legislation to protect the black community according to the Miller...
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...graduation class in West Point, Ulysses S. Grant was a talented equestrian who experienced many highs and lows in his life. Given his background, one would have never known about Grant’s accomplishments in the bloody war. In fact, Ulysses S. Grant’s career in the military was an accident. In 1839, Jesse Grant, Ulysses S. Grant’s father, enrolled his son into the military at West Point. His father believed it was the right decision, and Ulysses “thought so too, if he did” (Grant 9). However, even at West Point, Grant was not an outstanding student, but rather a shy and average student. To elaborate, “The simple local schools bored him, and other children mistook his quietness for stupidity” (qtd. in American President: Ulysses S. Grant 13)....
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...Ulysses S. Grant was born on April 27, 1822 and lived to July 23, 1885. He was the 18th President of the United States from 1869 to 1877. As Commanding General in 1864 to 1869, Grant worked preat close to President Abraham Lincoln To lead the Union Army to victory over the Confederacy in the American Civil War..Grant graduated in 1843 from the United States Military Academy, then served in the Mexican–American War for a bit. After the war he married Julia Boggs Dent in 1848, they also had four children. Grant retired from the Army in 1854 and struggled in a normal life. When the Civil War began in 1861, he joined the U.S. Army. In 1862, Grant took control of Kentucky and most of Tennessee, and then also led Union troops to victory in the Battle...
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...The Ulysses Roller Coaster By Chris Webber (4034141) American Public University System July 10, 2015 HIST101: American History to 1877 Professor Gerlach What do George Washington, Dwight Eisenhower and Andrew Jackson all have in common? They were all war proven generals that later became president. Another name that can go on this list is General Ulysses Simpson Grant. Grant is considered one of the most important men for the Union during the Civil War and he rode that fame into the White House. His roller coaster life had many lows that would have crushed the average man, which made is highs even grander. This is story of Ulysses S. Grant, his early life, early military career, Mexican War, Civil War and finally his presidency. Ulysses S. Grant was born on April 27th 1822 to the name of Hiram Ulysses Grant1. His father, Jesse Grant, was a tanner and mildly successful business man. Ulysses did not have the same knack for business or tanning as his father. As a matter of fact, he did not really have a knack for much of anything, other than horses. His small stature, poor family and lack of good business knowledge quickly made him the laughing stock of his community. He was known to have tried to haggle a deal to buy a colt. Instead of offering low, he offered his low price, middle price and high price all in the same offer. Needless to say the horses’ owner sold the colt for the highest price2. This lack of common business sense and the fact that Ulysses did not want...
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...Ulysses S. Grant Ulysses S. Grant was born Hiram Ulysses Grant on April, 27, 1822, in Point Pleasant, Ohio, near the mouth of the Big Indian Creek at the Ohio River. His famous moniker, "U.S. Grant," came after he joined the military (Bowery). He was entrusted with command of all U.S. armies in 1864, and relentlessly pursued the enemy during the Civil War. In 1869, at age 46, Grant became the youngest president in the United States. Grant was an American hero in the eyes of Americans because of his leadership in the Civil War, and leadership in our country. When the Civil War began in 1861, Ulysses S. Grant jumped at the chance to volunteer for military service in the Union army. His first command was as the colonel of the 21st Illinois Infantry, but he was quickly promoted to brigadier general in July 1861, and in September was given command of the District of Southeast Missouri (Waugh). His 1862 triumphs at Fort Henry and Fort Donelson in western Tennessee won him the nickname “Unconditional Surrender” Grant, and placed him before the public eye (Bowery). He...
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...Born on April 27, 1822 as Hiram Ulysses Grant, this once a timid, shy boy soon became one of the bravest and most influential of all the U.S. leaders. The Civil War began when the Union North and the Confederate South had different ideas of how to run the country. Grant’s fiercely patriotic attitude and leadership skills proved to be vital for the Union’s victory in the Civil War. Ulysses S. Grant was born on April 27, 1822 in Point Pleasant, Ohio with the birth name of Hiram Ulysses Grant (Ulysses S. Grant Biography). Grant’s family owned a tannery to process animal skin into high quality leather. Grant loathed the work and swore that he would acquire a much better job when he was to become an adult. Unlike his father, Grant was shy, timid, and often bullied. He was regularly called “Useless Grant” by bullies. Grant describes his childhood as “mostly uneventful” (Ulysses S. Grant Biography). At the age of 17, Grant’s father sent him off to the United States Military Academy at West Point. Upon his arrival, an error showed that he was listed as “Ulysses S. Grant,” instead of Hiram Ulysses Grant. In fear of being rejected by the school, Grant changed his...
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...Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th president of the United States, is considered a hero of the Civil War, and rightfully so—he worked his way up to the top of the Union army’s hierarchy, seized Vicksburg, giving the United States control over the Mississippi River during the war, and accepted Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865. However, even national heroes who are hailed for their successes have made mistakes. On December 17, 1862, during the crux of the Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant issued General Orders No. 11, one mistake that affected the lives of American Jews throughout the entire country. The Civil War’s chaotic atmosphere highlighted General Ulysses S. Grant’s stereotypical view of the Jewish...
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