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・ Adolph Wilhelm Otto
・ Adolph Winkler Goodman
・ Adolph Woermann
・ Adolph Wold
・ Adolph Wolter
・ Adolph Zang Mansion
・ Adolph Zukor
・ Adolph, Count of Oldenburg-Delmenhorst
・ Adolph, Landgrave of Hesse-Philippsthal-Barchfeld
・ Adolph, Prince of Nassau-Schaumburg
・ Adolph, West Virginia
・ Adolphe
・ Adolphe (disambiguation)
・ Adolphe (film)
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Adolphe 1920
・ Adolphe Abrahams
・ Adolphe Adam
・ Adolphe Alexandre Chaillet
・ Adolphe Allard
・ Adolphe Ambowodé
・ Adolphe Appia
・ Adolphe Appian
・ Adolphe Bartels
・ Adolphe Bazaine-Vasseur
・ Adolphe Beaufrère
・ Adolphe Biarent
・ Adolphe Billault
・ Adolphe Blanc
・ Adolphe Boissevain


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Adolphe 1920 : ウィキペディア英語版
Adolphe 1920

Written by John Rodker and published in 1929, ''Adolphe 1920'' is a novella set in Paris, spanning eight hours in the life of its protagonist, Dick. 〔John Rodker, ''Poems & Adolphe 1920'', ed. Andrew Crozier (Manchester: Carcanet, 1996)〕
It is similar in many respects to James Joyce's ''Ulysses'' and Virginia Woolf's ''Mrs. Dalloway'' in its use of stream-of-consciousness narration and the limiting of the action to just one day. In this sense it is very much a modernist text.
Dick is a manic narrator, and reminiscent of Septimus Smith, the shell-shocked war veteran of Woolf's ''Mrs.Dalloway''. There are several references to the after effects of the First World War, and the novella's fractured nature could be seen as a metaphor for fractured post-war Europe.
==Plot summary==

The novella is split into eight sections - each spanning roughly an hour. The narrative is fragmented, often making it difficult to tell who is talking or thinking, or whether events are occurring in the present or being recalled.

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