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| | Nate Dorward - Chicago Review |
 | | Joyce's return was announced by stone floods (1995), which collects a burst of writing from the early 1990s (along with three poems from the 1980s). |  | | It is important to stress that Joyce's Sweeny is a creative, exploratory "working" rather than a translation; Pound is one obvious model, and Joyce's own note reveals his admiration for the instance of the nineteenth-century Irish poet James Clarence Mangan. |  | | Like Pound in Canto I, Joyce is at pains to make it clear that we're reading a compound text in which the question of who is speaking cannot be clearly answered: what we're reading is filtered through a centuries-long process of composition, transmission, copying, corruption, tinkering, translation, and reworking. |
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http://www.soundeye.org/trevorjoyce/chicagoreview.htm
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| | Lives of Quiet Desperation - The World and I Magazine |
 | | The one story in which Trevor lets himself have the pleasure of confronting the lies and the phonies is "The Old Boys." It tells of a reunion of former public-school boys. |  | | The silent pulling apart of families was an everyday occurrence in Joyce's time, and in a society that was addicted to secret societies, the Irish had long since learned to deal in banter and wit and laughter and cunning to hide their true feelings. |  | | All of his characters are the direct descendants of Joyce and O'Connor and O'Faolin. |
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http://www.worldandi.com/public/1995/june/ar1.cfm
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| | Trevor Joyce: Reviews |
 | | Trevor Joyce has taught himself to write outside himself, about things in the world. |  | | This extraordinary collection brings together the entirety of his work to date that Trevor Joyce wishes to preserve. |  | | Reviews of Trevor Joyce's with the first dream of fire... |
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http://www.shearsman.com/pages/books/catalog/joyce2.html
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | Rather, he states that a predominant question woven throughout Joyce's texts, especially Ulysses, refers to "Who owns the English language?"(9) He argues that Joyce's characters are fighting for ownership of language, "of the modes and channels of communication"(5), of one's own psyche and even of one's own body. |  | | Reading Joyce Politically strives to demonstrate that although Joyce's work has been widely-characterized as apolitical, this is in fact a misconception; Williams proposes that Joyce's work, both in reference to its content and technique, can and should be viewed from a political perspective, specifically from a Marxist perspective. |  | | The author moves to introduce the discussion of language throughout Joyce's works, referencing an observation made by Giorgio Melchiori, "Joyce's politics are the politics of language(6)". |
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http://www.uncg.edu/eng/courses/relangen/eng657/reports/jhumphreyl.htm
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| | Law above Nations:Supranational Courts and the Legalization of Politics - a book from the University Press of Florida |
 | | He also engages contemporary Joyce critics, including Fredric Jameson, Franco Moretti, and Terry Eagleton, many of whom have attempted to redress the leftist attacks on Joyce and to demonstrate his relevance to a postcolonial critical approach. |  | | Williamss answer, formulated in the first chapter, is to argue that reading Joyce, who was keenly aware of the impact of unequal power relations, is not only justifiable but relevant, legitimate, and necessary. |  | | It will be of interest to Joyceans, literary theorists, and anyone who still believes that to read Joyce is not only justifiable but relevant, legitimate, and necessary. |
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http://www.upf.com/FALL1997/williams.html
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| | Review by Celia Marshik |
 | | Trevor Williams's study is inspired by a conviction of the political importance of reading and teaching the works of James Joyce. |  | | Beginning Joyce scholars, overwhelmed by the sheer volume of material on the author's allusions and social critiques, will find in Williams a capable guide to Joyce's exploration of the production of colonial consciousness and to political criticism of his work. |  | | However, Williams notes that Olivier's "attributes are all visible in Joyce's life and work" (122) and concludes that "Joyce's account of imperialism is the more psychologically satisfying" (134); such comments may lead readers to the conclusion that Olivier's book receives too much weight in Williams's study. |
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http://www.samla.org/sar/marshik.htm
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| | Trevor Joyce's Syzygy Reviewed in The Irish Times |
 | | Syzygy, Joyce's latest work, is presented as a text comprising three parts: the first two are verse, titled respectively "The Drift" and "The Net", while the third, two pages of prose, provides "Some Notes". |  | | And this state of affairs is all the more regrettable when one considers that two of the greatest literary experimenters of the 20th century, Joyce and Beckett, were Irish. |  | | All of which brings me, albeit circuitously, to the latest work by the little-known (for commercial reasons but probably the most experimental of contemporary Irish poets — Trevor Joyce. |
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http://www.wildhoneypress.com/Reviews/IrishTimes98.html
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| | Jacket 20 - Andrew Duncan reviews Trevor Joyce |
 | | Few birds, it seems, can have died in Dublin in those years without God being aware of it or Trevor Joyce being on the scene, with a notebook. |  | | The analogy with Joyce, publishing no book of poetry for 23 years, presents itself rather forcefully. |  | | The absence of run-on, the asyndeton of folk poetry may bear some relationship to Joyce’s inability to develop a running line, the non-discursive quality of his writing. |
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http://jacketmagazine.com/20/dunc-r-joyc.html
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| | CORK |
 | | Trevor Joyce, Cath Kenneally, Patrick Galvin, Marcella Edwards |
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http://tomraworth.com/cork.html
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| | SFCC Library Guide: Contemporary Fiction Writers |
 | | The instructor; Joyce Carol Oates; Salmagundi, Fall 2001, Iss. |  | | Au Sable; Joyce Carol Oates; Harper's, Feb 1999; Vol. |  | | Wolf's Head Lake; Joyce Carol Oates; Salmagundi, Fall 2000, Iss. |
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http://library.sfcc.spokane.cc.wa.us/guides/authors.stm
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| | Biographies |
 | | He is also active as a translator, both of his own work into French and sometimes into English, and of poets such as Paul Celan, Miroslav Holub, Benjamin Péret, Joyce Mansour, René Daumal, Max Jacob, Pierre Joris and Jerome Rothenberg, among others, into Arabic. |  | | Some current poetic inspirations: Jellaladin Rumi, Emily Dickinson, Colin Reeves, Paul Eluard, Tom Joyce, Maurice Blanchot. |  | | He has published seven collections of poetry and has translated into Arabic Shakespeare's Hamlet and Macbeth, and James Joyce's Ulysses. |
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http://www.masthead.net.au/issue9/biogs9.html
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| | LISTSERV 14.4 |
 | | Trevor Joyce reading in RARE BOOKS (35 lines) |  | | Trevor Joyce reading in RARE BOOKS (27 lines) |  | | Fw: TAKE OVER / UNDONE, SAY: two new books by Trevor Joyce (259 lines) |
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http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A1=ind0310&L=core-l
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| | SDSUniverse Irish Poet Trevor Joyce Comes to the Library |
 | | Dublin-born poet Trevor Joyce will read from his work as part of the Fall 2003 Hugh C. Hyde Living Writers Series on Thursday, November 6, at 7:00 p.m. |  | | Irish Poet Trevor Joyce Comes to the Library |  | | Joyce is the author of nine volumes of poetry, including Sole Glum Trek, The Poems of Sweeny Peregrine, stone floods, and Syzygy. |
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http://www.sdsuniverse.info/info_content_event.asp?id=10738
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| | Calendar of Events |
 | | Irish poet and scholar Trevor Joyce is a man of diverse accomplishments. |  | | Appointed a Fulbright Scholar for 2002-2003, Joyce is researching specific overlaps in science, history, and poetry. |  | | Joyce has worked as a systems analyst and lectured on classical Chinese poetry. |
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http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/calendar/DisplayEventDetail.asp?iEventID=9004&...
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| | Alaska adventure for credit: student opportunities to last a lifetime |
 | | Trevor Joyce has been able to live this dream during his summer vacation for the last two years. |  | | Luckily, the habitat isnt popular enough for a resort yet so the dangers of urbanization and the strangulation of another beautiful slice of nature by man hasnt occurred
yet. |  | | Assistant professor in the Biology program Beth Matthews was one of Joyces advisors who guided his procedure and methods for his research for college credit. |
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http://www.jun.alaska.edu/whalesong/volumes/vol24_issue6/adventure.html
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| | Joyce Carol Oates Biography -- Academy of Achievement |
 | | But young Joyce enjoyed the natural environment of farm country, and displayed a precocious interest in books and writing. |  | | If you like Joyce Carol Oates's story, you might also like: |  | | In the ten years that followed, Joyce Carol Oates published new books at the extraordinary rate of two or three per year, while teaching full-time. |
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http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/oat0bio-1
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| | Sheffield Poetry International |
 | | Trevor Joyce has published nine books of poetry including With the first dream of fire they hunt the cold: A Body of Work 1966-2000 (Shearsman Books). |  | | He was co-founder of New Writers’ Press in Dublin in the 1960s and has been director of the Cork International Poetry Festival since 1997. |
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http://www.westhousebooks.co.uk/readings2.asp
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| | Trevor Joyce: with the first dream |
 | | Further details may be had on the Recent Books section of this site. |  | | Click on the titles below to read some poems by Trevor Joyce, taken from this volume: |  | | Photo of Trevor Joyce, Cork, May 2002 by Tom Raworth. |
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http://www.shearsman.com/pages/books/catalog/joyce1.html
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| | The New York Review of Books: Denis Donoghue |
 | | Dubliners by James Joyce, edited by Hans Walter Gabler, by Walter Hettche |  | | A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce, edited by Seamus Deane |  | | A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce, edited by R. Kershner |
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http://www.nybooks.com/authors/112
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| | Breeze |
 | | Sweat Pea only knew Joyce and Trevor as her parents. |  | | Well done Joyce and Trevor for your efforts in saving a life. |  | | John Norris and Joyce Neesome proudly presents, on a musical theme |
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http://www.tollers.com/breeze.htm
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| | Sound Eye ~ Trevor Joyce |
 | | In 1976 Joyce published his working of the Irish text, Suibhne Gealt, in The Poems of Sweeny Peregrine eight years before Sweeney Astray, the same original in a version by Seamus Heaney. |  | | Born in Dublin in 1947, Trevor Joyce co-founded New Writers' Press in 1967 with Michael Smith. |  | | Joyce's work has recently appeared in The Recorder, Talisman Magazine, The Gig, SVP Magazine andShearsman. |
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http://indigo.ie/~tjac/Poets/Trevor_Joyce/trevor_joyce.htm
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| | Exquisite Corpse - A Journal of Letters and Life |
 | | Trevor Joyce made sure that the two-hundred-foot extension cord was securely fastened to the outlet in his garage. |  | | Trevor handed the Claxton guitar to one of his young admirers. |  | | Trevor took a swig from the bottle, wiped his lips, then looked at his reflection in the mirror. |
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http://www.corpse.org/issue_11/ficciones/rosch.html
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| | Prisoner: Cell Block H - episodes (526) to (530) |
 | | Joan finds Joyce practising her tap routine, but keeps quiet about her own dancing prowess [to be revealed in episode (604)]. |  | | Myra asks Joan if Dennis has been charged with the murder, and she can't even be bothered to ask them how they found out and sneers that he'll be too busy to be coming back to work. |  | | Myra is down on Lexie for not paying up her debts. |
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http://www.wwwentworth.co.uk/week526.htm
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| | Trevor Joyce -- Bevere-Vivis Gallery Artist of the Month -- June 2000 |
 | | This painting is framed in double mount buff on white with a muted gold frame. |  | | There is nearly always a selection of Trevor Joyce's original paintings for sale in the |  | | Trevor Joyce -- Bevere-Vivis Gallery Artist of the Month -- June 2000 |
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http://www.beverevivis.com/registry/trevorjoyce.htm
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| | Home Page |
 | | Most of the poetry here is new, though some has been previously published, and anyone viewing the material is reminded that although it is free for personal use, the authors do assert their moral right to copyright. |  | | A Chide's Alphabet (for Sum) is an international magazine of the latest poetry, issue 1 features Trevor Joyce and Randolph Healy (Eire) Candice Ward (USA) Alison Croggon and Emma Lew (Australia) Ian Davidson (Wales) Robin Hamilton (Scotland) and David Bircumshaw (England) |
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http://www.chidesplay.8m.com
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| | The Irish Fulbright Commission - Annual Awards - Irish Awards - Profiles of Awardees |
 | | Through this project Mr Joyce wants to continue exploring and elaborating new poetic forms which can address the complexity of a life in this place at this time, experienced through perspectives of history, science and philosophical understanding. |  | | This is part of a larger project which Mr Joyce already began in a number of his texts included in his most recent volume of collected poems, With the first dream of the fire they hunt the cold (New Writers' Press/Shearsman Books, 2001) and, most specifically, in Syzygy, Hopeful Monsters and Trem Neul. |  | | Project Title: Poetry and History: Mutual Remapping, the life and activities of Robert Dwyer Joyce in the Boston area. |
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http://www.fulbright.ie/irish_awards_profile_of_awardees.php?nme=trevor_joyce
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| | Trevor Joyce: stone floods |
 | | Based on an admittedly limited acquaintance so far (this book, Sweeny and Syzygy) I would have to say that Trevor Joyce is one of the major poets on either side of the Irish Sea, and that includes certain well-known names of both modernist and mainstream credentials. |  | | A major discovery for me, this was Joyce's first collection in some 18 years. |  | | I scurried back looking for earlier books and was similarly impressed by The Poems of Sweeny Peregrine. |
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http://indigo.ie/~tjac/Poets/Trevor_Joyce/stone_floods/stone_floods.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | His work shows a wide range of poetic influences, and he has addressed various scholarly organizations on the subject of Chinese poetry and poetics and has recently revived the New Writers' Press. |  | | Trevor Joyce was born in 1947 and grew up in Dublin. |  | | Now living in Cork, where he works for Apple Computer, he was one of the founders of New Writers' Press, an important voice of experimental poetry in the 1960s and 70s. |
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http://www.nd.edu/~ndr/issues/ndr7/archambeau/joyce.html
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| | Joyce - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | There several famous individuals with the name Joyce: |  | | This is a disambiguation page, a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title. |  | | Some models of the Amstrad PCW were also affectionately known as Joyce, especially in Germany; the name is that of a secretary of Alan Sugar, the founder of Amstrad, and was the codename of the machine while it was in development. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joyce
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| | OCT 1703 TREVOR JOYCE - CR |
 | | – Award-winning poet and co-founder of the New Writer?s Press in Dublin Trevor Joyce will give a poetry reading on Wednesday, November 12 at 8 p.m. |  | | OCT 1703 TREVOR JOYCE - CR LMU Home |  | | Born in Dublin, Ireland, Joyce has published nine volumes of poetry, including The Poems of Sweeny Peregrine (1976), Stone Floods (1995), which was nominated for the Irish Times Literary Award for Poetry, and With the First Dream of Fire They Hung the Cold (2001). |
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http://www.lmu.edu/pages/7194.asp
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| | Related Links |
 | | E-text of 10 poems by the Irish poet Trevor Joyce, co-founder of New Writers' Press, Dublin. |  | | E-text of 20+ poems by Dusty, who was a nurse in Vietnam. |  | | A site for recent Irish poets, including Brian Coffey, Randolph Healy, Trevor Joyce (who maintains this site), Michael Smith, Tom Raworth. |
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http://www.lit.kobe-u.ac.jp/~hishika/otherlink.htm
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| | Fabian Sebastian Williams |
 | | Fabian married Joyce Jenkins, daughter of John Lewis Jenkins and Florence Mildred Trevor. |  | | This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. |  | | This Web Site was Created 8 May 2005 with Legacy 5.0 from Millennia |
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http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/ivorjackson/1283.htm
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| | University College Dublin |
 | | "Trevor Joyce's Syzygy" The Recorder XIII:2 (Fall 2000) 73-6 |  | | "Scriptor ignotus, with the fire in him now" [The Poetry of Trevor Joyce] The Dublin Review No. 6 (Spring 2002) 42-65 |  | | "Foreward: Italian-Irish Celebrations" in Umberto Eco and Liberato Santoro-Brienza Talking of Joyce (Dublin: UCD Press, 1998) 1-5 |
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http://www.ucd.ie/english/staff/mays.htm
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| | Links to other sites of interest |
 | | Contributors include Kathy Acker, Trevor Joyce, Lawrence Upton. |  | | among others, Michael Ayres, Tom Lowenstein and Trevor Joyce. |  | | is Trevor Joyce's space for invention: "if the eye be sound the fish is sweet". |
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http://www.greatworks.org.uk/links.html
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| | Syzygy by Trevor Joyce |
 | | Click here for Trevor Joyce's author page at the Sound Eye website.. |  | | Click here to see the full text of Syzygy. |  | | Click here to read a review of Syzygy by Michael Smith. |
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http://www.wildhoneypress.com/BOOKS/Syz.html
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| | Never mind the beasts: 07/01/2004 - 07/31/2004 |
 | | 1)Trevor Joyce's With the First Dream of Fire They Hunt the Cold, a Body of Work 1966/2000 |  | | Now I am reading Trevor Joyce in a small even pace. |  | | One more longish poem for the manuscript and I am done (no more mass fiddling only small tinkering). |
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http://marcusslease.blogspot.com/2004_07_01_marcusslease_archive.html
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| | William R. Dowling's Virtual Memorial |
 | | Race (first son) and Joyce (developed this site) |  | | Link to Joyce Dowling's Web Site (contains family photo albums) |  | | Left to Right: Race, Trevor, Joyce, Maia, Travis, Megan, Maria, Tyler (front), Adam, Peggy (with Bill's urn), Justin, Troy, Cindy, Joanna |
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http://www.drix.net/dowling/memory
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| | Trevor Joyce - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Trevor Joyce (born October 26, 1947) is an Irish poet, born in Dublin. |  | | Joyce's poetry employs a wide range of forms and techniques, ranging from those of classical Chinese and traditional Irish to modern experimentalism. |  | | He has published notable versions from Chinese and from the middle-Irish. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trevor_Joyce
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| | Morrissey-solo Trevor Horn producing new album? |
 | | Mike Joyce would be a dab hand at the desk. |  | | ...Morrissey has also opted for a big-name producer on his provisionally titled Irish Blood, English Heart, working with Trevor Horn. |  | | Trevor Horn was the producer of an early hip-hop album by Malcolm McLaren and the World's Famous Supreme Team, called `Duck Rock' (1982). |
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http://www.morrissey-solo.com/article.pl?sid=04/01/03/1939207&mode=thread
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| | Prisoner: Cell Block H - episodes (521) to (525) |
 | | Mervin comes for interview for the cook's job and Joyce helps him fill in his application forms (how did he get an interview without filling in a form earlier?). |  | | Judy asks to keep Sam's drawings of her as Joyce is packing up Sam's belongings to send them to her family. |  | | Lexie tells the women that Alice is to be charged with Sam's murder after Jan has lagged on her. |
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http://www.wwwentworth.co.uk/week521.htm
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| | Martin and Caroline Davis's families - Person Page 22 |
 | | Children of Joyce Jeffries Davis and Evelyn James Dickinson |  | | Children of Evelyn James Dickinson and Joyce Jeffries Davis |  | | He married Joyce Jeffries Davis, daughter of John Jeffries Davis and Catherine ("Kate") Freer, on 9 June 1912. |
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http://www.freerangephotography.co.uk/MMDgenealogy-p/p22.htm
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| | Trevor Nunn Profile -- Academy of Achievement |
 | | But Trevor Nunn would not abandon his dreams of the theater. |  | | If you like Trevor Nunn's story, you might also like: |  | | In 1979, he made theatrical history with his eight-hour stage adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel, Nicholas Nickleby which was seen on both stage and television on both sides of the Atlantic. |
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http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/nun0pro-1
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| | Prague International Poetry Festival |
 | | His poems have appeared internationally in many journals, and he has published eleven volumes of poetry, including The Poems of Sweeny Peregrine (1976), his working of the middle-Irish Buile Suibhne, and stone floods (1995), which was nominated for the Irish Times Literature Prize for Poetry. |  | | Much of Joyce's recent work reaches beyond the conventional medium of the printed page, and explores possibilities of writing in the new electronic media and in association with other disciplines. |  | | Born in Dublin 1947, Trevor Joyce co-founded New Writers' Press in Dublin with Michael Smith, and edited the influential journal, The Lace Curtain until the mid-70s. |
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http://www.geocities.com/praguepoetryfestival/pipf.html
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| | Brian Coffey |
 | | His work was championed by anumber of younger Irish poets, especially Michael Smith (poet) and Trevor Joyce.These two published Coffey's Selected Poems, and this book was instrumental in helping establish his reputation as aleading exponent of Modernist poetry. |  | | He also set up his own publishing enterprise, Advent Press. |
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http://www.therfcc.org/brian-coffey-14598.html
(297 words)
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| | APPEAL FOR PEACE Davies Memorial UU Church in Prince George's Co., MD |
 | | This is perhaps one of the most difficult jobs of creating true peace. |  | | And it is my understanding that he did not deny his crimes, but merely tried to justify the raping of civilians and burning of villages as a simple act of war. |  | | Trevor participated in a discussion and activity with other youth on how to overcome obstacles to peace. |
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http://www.dmuuc.org/lay/peace.html
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| | The Ace of Cads (1926) |
 | | Cast: Adolphe Menjou, Alice Joyce, Norman Trevor, Philip Strange, Suzanne Fleming. |  | | Alice Joyce, always gracious and patrician, has a part more to her liking, and in both periods of the play looks the part, for the [sic] still can suggest youth while being even better in the flower of maturity. |  | | The fussiness of the military martinet has been stressed until the role is all out of proportion. |
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http://www.stanford.edu/~gdegroat/AJ/reviews/aoc.htm
(835 words)
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| | Trevor Joyce |
 | | The poems in this book cover work from 1966 to 2000 and show a progession of styles from traditionalism to postmodernisim. |  | | I suspect, most readers will enjoy quite a fair proportion of the writing, but few, perhaps, will like it all. |  | | Before commenting on this review please read the FAQ page |
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http://home.clara.net/nhi/bs0448.htm
(541 words)
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