Dubliners
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Kerrygold Irish Dubliner CheeseDubliner is delicious cool and straight from the package or melted into you favorite dishes. It's so versatile that it pairs nicely with a light, sweet wine, or even with a heady stout. -
Review: The Dubliner Irish Pub in Bangkok, Thailand: Popular with Expats but Only Offering Mediocre FareThe Dubliner Irish Pub in Bangkok offers mediocre and high-priced food in a nice environment. -
Underlying Themes in the First Two Stories of James Joyce's DublinersAn in-depth literary analysis of James Joyce's Dubliners, looking at the historical and cultural associations in the first two stories, digging through Joyce's modernist language for a more thorough understanding.
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Top 10 Irish Pub SongsThis is my personal list of top 10 Irish pub songs.
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The Unwritten Epilogues of James Joyce's DublinersAn examination of the implied back stories in Dubliners.
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The Dubliners: Ireland's Greatest Folk Music GroupThe Dubliners have become as much a legend in Ireland as many of heroes they sing about. The seemingly immortal group entered the music scene during a boom in the public's interest in popular ballads. -
The Dubliners' Bobby Lynch: A Dubliner ForeverBobby Lynch is an almost forgotten member of The Dubliners. Having spent only one year with the group, Bobby didn't have the same impact on the group that other former members had.
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The Dubliners' Patsy Watchorn: The NewcomerPatsy Watchorn may be the newest addition to The Dubliners' line up, but he has a long history as a balladeer. Patsy's entry into the group marked the first time since founder Luke Kelly's death that The Dubliners had a regular 5-string banjoist.
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The Dubliners' Paddy Reilly: The Pub EntertainerBorn in Rathcoole, County Dublin in 1939, Paddy Reilly got an early start in music. In a 1968 interview with Folk Magazine, he remembered, "Both my Ma and Da were good singers in their young days. I got quite a few songs from them."
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The Dubliners' Eamonn Campbell: The ProducerThough he didn't join The Dubliners until 1987, guitarist Eamonn Campbell has a long history with the popular Irish folk group. Eamonn was born in Drogheda, County Louth in 1946, making him the youngest member of The Dubliners.
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The Dubliners' Sean Cannon: A One Man ShowBorn in Galway in 1940, guitarist Sean Cannon became the first member of The Dubliners who was not himself from Dublin. Sean is known as one of the more cosmopolitan members of the group.
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The Dubliners' Jim McCann: The McCann ManJim McCann had a long career in music before joining the Dubliners. Born on October 26, 1944 in Dublin, Jim was introduced to folk music while a medical student at University College Dublin.
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The Dubliners' John Sheahan: The Quiet OneJohn Sheahan is perhaps the most unlikely member of The Dubliners. His quiet nature and classical music training set him apart from his fellow group members.
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The Dubliners' Luke Kelly: The Dublin MinstrelLuke Kelly's sincere, passionate voice is a Dublin legend. Luke's contribution helped bring the Dubliners, a group he helped found in 1962, to international recognition.
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The Dubliners' Ronnie Drew: The King of IrelandDubbed "The King of Ireland," the Irish folk singer Ronnie Drew had a musical career spanning five decades. Though well known through his solo work, it was the years he spent with the Dubliners for which he is best known. -
James Joyce, the Word Painter of The DublinersJames Joyce's work seems simple to the naïve reader however, by scrutinizing his puzzling symbols in his visual images, words choice and style changes, the reader can conclude that the Dubliners is a chronologically structured book...
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Common Themes Throughout James Joyce's DublinersJames Joyce applied several common themes throughout Dubliners. They send out clear messages to the readers, and they are what link the short stories together and help make Dubliners an astounding piece of literature.
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Comparison of How Emotional Paralysis is Presented in "Dubliners and "The Snapper"This thorough analysis achieved full marks, (100%) as part of English Literature A2 coursework.
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Critical Reflection in James Joyce's The DublinersSøren Kierkegaard, 19th century theologian and seminal existential philosopher, journalized that "all deep thought begins and ends in the attempt to grasp whatever touches one most immediately" ("Critical Reflection").
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Opening Letters with Claymores: James Joyce's DublinersIt's better to be dramatic than to be drab. -
Paralysis in All Stages of Life as Seen in James Joyce's DublinersJames Joyce chose to relate his feelings regarding the society of Dublin early in the 19th century through his collection of short stories, Dubliners. The stories illustrate the paralysis that Joyce believed was wrought through the people of Dublin.
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Suspending Reader Criticism in James Joyce's DublinersThe utterance of 'judgment' hs the ability of interpolating the moral paralysis that pervades in all of teh short stories of which Dubliners is comprised, in addition to making reference to the capacity of the reader.
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Whiskey and GraceWhiskey and Grace is a flash fiction story. It consists of 69 words. Its theme is love, whiskey and James Joyce. -
Post-Colonial Power Structures: Colonization as Depicted Within James Joyce's DublinersThis paper details the detrimental effect colonization has on a colonized body and the even more powerful self-colonization that occurs in its wake.
Video: Dubliners
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