Difference between revisions of "Phoenish"
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** [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/JoyceColl/JoyceColl-idx?type=turn&entity=JoyceColl001600160321&isize=M&q1=Phoenix Third Census of Finnegans Wake] | ** [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/JoyceColl/JoyceColl-idx?type=turn&entity=JoyceColl001600160321&isize=M&q1=Phoenix Third Census of Finnegans Wake] | ||
** [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix Wikipedia] | ** [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix Wikipedia] | ||
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+ | [[Category:Mythical Figures]] | ||
* Dubliners, Ivy Day In The Committee Room: "Rise like Phoenix from the flames" (about '''Parnell''') | * Dubliners, Ivy Day In The Committee Room: "Rise like Phoenix from the flames" (about '''Parnell''') |
Revision as of 12:37, 2 August 2006
- Phoenix: the bennu, a mythical Egyptian bird that rises from its own ashes → ties in with theme of life and sleep cycles, and resurrection and waking
- Dubliners, Ivy Day In The Committee Room: "Rise like Phoenix from the flames" (about Parnell)
- T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land (Death By Water): Phlebas the Phoenician
- Phoenix Tavern: 18th Century public house on the site of the present Mullingar House (in which FW, for the most part, is set)
- finish
- Phoenicians: ancient Semitic people; Carthage was a Phoenician city that was utterly destroyed by Rome in the Third Punic War (148-146 B.C.); the Romans so detested the Phoenicians that they spread salt over the fields so that nothing would ever grow there again → an eighteenth-century theory held that the Irish were of Carthaginian origin!
- Phoenix Park: Dublin's principal municipal park