Many critics suggested that the interior monologue technique (having access to a character's thoughts, connections which are not logical but rather emotional, etc) is derived from Freud's theories, although James Joyce constantly denied it, paying tribute in turn to other writers, notably to Edouard Dujardin.
He is known to have said with disdain: "Psychologist! What can a man know but what passes inside his own head?" (in Richard Ellmann's James Joyce)
Wolfgang-Hans Riekenberg has written: 'James Joyces \\'
James Tatum has written: 'The mourner's song' -- subject(s): American War poetry, American literature, Greek Epic poetry, History and criticism, Influence, Literature and the conflict, Literature and the war, Memory in literature, Mourning customs in literature, Trojan War, Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975, War in literature, War poetry
Regardless of your personal opinion of author James Joyce, he was a plank-owner of the modernist movement in literature. His style of writing might seem extended or "wordy" to modern consumers of literature, but his works have been a major influence in the fields of writing since their publication.
James Jackson Putnam has written: 'James Jackson Putnam and psychoanalysis' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Psychoanalysis, Psychoanalysts 'A memoir of Dr. James Jackson' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Jackson family 'Human motives' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Mind and body, Motivation (Psychology), Psychology
How did James Watson influence other people?
James Treadwell has written: 'Autobiographical writing and British literature, 1783-1834' -- subject(s): Autobiography in literature, English literature, History and criticism, Romanticism, Self in literature
James L. Lucas has written: 'The religious dimension of twentieth-century British and American literature' -- subject(s): American literature, English literature, History and criticism, Religion and literature, Religion in literature
Thelma G. James has written: 'Literature of the world' -- subject(s): Collections, Literature
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James Joyce's most important works are "Ulysses," "Dubliners," and "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man." These works are considered iconic in modernist literature and have had a significant influence on the development of the novel as a literary form.
James D. Hartman has written: 'Providence Tales and the Birth of American Literature' -- subject(s): History and criticism, American literature, English literature, Shipwrecks in literature, Witchcraft in literature, Geographical discoveries in literature, Supernatural in literature, Providence and government of God in literature, Indian captivities, English influences
James S. Brown has written: 'A practical introduction to literary study' -- subject(s): American literature, English literature, History and criticism, Literature, Theory