Henke, Suzette A. James Joyce and the Politics of Desire. Routledge, 1990.
Svevo, Livia. Memoir of Italo Svevo, translated by Isabel Quigly. Marlboro P, 1990.
Lernout, Geert. The French Joyce. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 1990.
Martin, Augustine, editor. James Joyce: The Artist and the Labyrinth. Ryan Publishing, 1990.
Mikhail, E. H., editor. James Joyce: Interviews and Recollections. Macmillan P, 1990.
Lernout, Geert, editor. Finnegans Wake: Fifty Years. Editions Rodopi B. V., 1990.
Kumar, Udaya. The Joycean Labyrinth: Repetition, Time, and Tradition in Ulysses. Oxford UP, 1991.
Scholes, Robert. In Search of James Joyce. U of Illinois P, 1992.
Carey, Phyllis and Ed Jewinski, eds. RE: JOYCE’N BECKETT. Fordham UP, 1992.
Costello, Peter. James Joyce: The Years of Growth 1882-1915. London: Kyle Cathie, 1992.
Wales, Katie. The Language of James Joyce. London: Macmillan, 1992.
Cheng, Vincent J. and Timothy Martin, eds. Joyce in Context. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1992.
Brunsdale, Mitzi. James Joyce: A Study of the Short Fiction. Twayne Publishers, 1993.
French, Marilyn. The Book as World: James Joyce's Ulysses. 1976. Paragon House, 1993.
Fairhall, James. James Joyce and the Question of History. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1993.
Friedman, Susan Stanford. Joyce: The Return of the Repressed. Ithaca and London: Cornell U P, 1993.
Leonard, Garry. Reading Dubliners Again: A Lacanian Perspective. Syracuse UP, 1993.
Duffy, Enda. The Subaltern Ulysses. U of Minnesota P, 1994.
Gibson, Andrew, ed. European Joyce Studies 3: Reading Joyce’s “Circe.” Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1994.
Benstock, Bernard. Narrative Con/Texts in Dubliners. Macmillan P, 1994.
Norris, David and Cark Flint. Joyce for Beginners. Icon Books, 1994.
JJBN:EAGLETON&JAMESON&SAID-1990
Eagleton, Terry, Fredric Jameson and Edward W. Said. Nationalism, Colonialism, and Literature. Introduction by Seamus Deane. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1990.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION Seamus Deane
NATIONALISM: IRONY AND COMMITMENT Terry Eagleton
MODERNISM AND IMPERIALISM Fredric Jameson
YEATS AND DECOLONIAZATION Edward W. Said
INDEX
JJBN: LERNOUT-1990
Lernout, Geert. The French Joyce. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 1990.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Chapter 1. Joyce Criticism: The Early Years
Chapter 2. Cixous, Derrida, Lacan
Chapter 3. University Criticism
Chapter 4. Joyce and Tel Quel
Chapter 5. The New Joyce in England and America
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
The French Joyce, the first book to trace the French critical reception to James Joyce's work, is a major contribution to Joyce scholarship as well as an important historical review of the French intellectual climate from the sixties to present.
Serious French interest in the Irish writer coincided with the rise of poststructuralism, and Lernout pays particular attention to Joycean criticism by Lacan, Derrida, and Cixous, who have provided the basis for psychoanalytical, philosophical, and feminist readings. The French university critics who took Derrida's and Lacan's work as their point of departure are examined, as well as the Tel Quel and Change writers. The author also looks at the effects of French theory on the study of Joyce by American, English, and Irish critics.
The author provides a provocative critique of poststructuralist readings, arguing that such readings are in fact romantic and idealistic, and examines the particularly French climate in which this type of theory could develop and flourish. The French Joyce is essential reading for Joyceans as well as those interested in the historical development of French-born literary theories. It will appeal to students of critical theory and postwar intellectual history.
(https://www.press.umich.edu/13168/french_joyce)
JJBN:KUMAR-1991
Kumar, Udaya. The Joycean Labyrinth: Repetition, Time, and Tradition in Ulysses. Oxford UP, 1991.
CONTENTS
Abbreviations
Note on the Citations of Ulysses
1. Introduction
2. Repetition: Its Modes and Levels
3. The Structure of Ulysses and the Experience of Time
4. Ulysses and the Notion of the Sign
5. Art, Language, and Tradition: Some Remarks on 'Proteus' and Joyce's Aesthetic Theories
6. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
This powerful and unusual study examines the relations between the textual organization of Ulysses and the notions of time, language, and poetics implicit in the novel. Making use of recent developments in philosophy and liteary theory, Udaya Kumar takes issue with those who, like Richard Ellmann, see Ulysses as a fully coherent text. Instead, he argues that the novel is a complex transitional text involving various degrees of mediation between opposing impulses such as naturalism and schematism, unification and detotalization.
The book begins with an examination of the pervasive use of repetition in Ulysses and shows that this results in a disruption of linear time and creats a 'textual memory'. This argument is further developed in relation to the question of time and the sign, where Ulysses is shown to display a differentiated and heterogeneous temporal experience. Finally, examining Joyce's early aesthetic theories, Udaya Kumar argues that Ulysses implies a radical notion of tradition as the site of difference and of the work of art as the reperformance of elements from tradition. The concluding chapter clarifies this idea in relation to other strands in modernism and postmodernism.
JJBN:RABATE-1991
Rabate, Jean-Michael. James Joyce, Authorized Reader. Baltimore and London: The John Hopkins UP, 1991.
CONTENTS
Abbrebiations and Short Titles
Preface
Introduction
ONE:
A Portrait of the Reader as a Young Dubliners
TWO
Thy Name Is Joy
THREE
The Figures of Incestitude
FOUR
Circe's Stagecraft
FIVE
Spinning Molly's Yarn
SIX
Idiolects, Idiolex
SEVEN
Languages of Eeath
EIGHT
A Portrait of the Author as a Bogeyman
Conclusion
Notes
ABOUT THE BOOK
Linking modernist literature with more recent developments in literary theory, Jean-Micahel Rabate's writings on James Joyce have atrracted widespread critical acclaim. Praised by Derrida and
others, Rabate's work combines psychoanalytical notions (adopted from Lacan) with more traditional philosophical approaches (Joyce seen in connection with Hegel and Vico, for instance).
Examining Joyce's texts from Dubliners to Finnegans Wake, Rabate traces a number of interconnected issues and relates them to Joyce's own reading and manuscripts sources as well as to recent
theoretical discussions. Among these issues are the function of the reader; the role of "perversity" (as opposed to "perversion"); the operation of what Rabate calls "the unconscious of the
text"; the uncertainties of authority; the role of family relations in Jouce; and the connections between the idiosyncracies of Joyce's language and questions of idiolect, idiom, and
ideology.
"Rabate writes with grace and wit, and his intimate accuaintance with French theoretical discussions informs his thinking at every point without ever becoiming overberaring; it is always Joyce
and Joyce's words that hold the center of attention. He also writes with a grasp of Joyce scholorship and extends it un several directions. Joyce emerges as a thoroughly European
writer, participating in a culture that goes well beyond the bounds of the English language." Derek Attridge, Rutgers University
JJBN:MACCABE-1991
マッケイブ、コリン『ジェイムズ・ジョイスと言語革命』加藤幹郎訳、筑摩書房、1991年.
目次
第一章 理論的予備考察
第二章 メタ言語の終焉 ジョージ・エリオットから『ダブリン市民』へ
第三章 物語の終わり 『スティーヴン・ヒーロー』と『若き芸術家の肖像』
第四章 要素の根源的分離 『ユリシーズ』における読者の距離化
第五章 言葉の都市、夢の街路 『ユリシーズ』の航海
第六章 『フィネガンズ・ウェイク』の政治的読解
第七章 ジョイスの政治学
原注
書誌
著者あとがき
ジョイス・映画・訳者付記
索引
ABOUT THE BOOKS
言説、セクシュアリティ、政治
真理とは、闘争である。20世紀最大の文学的天才が生み出した〈言語=欲望=力〉のテクストの謎に肉迫する、批評の戦い。知的興奮にあふれる、衝撃的なジョイス論の登場!
ジェイムズ・ジョイス――20世紀文学でもっとも偉大な変革者。だが、彼のもたらした〈言語革命〉の射程は究められたと言えるだろうか? 優れたジョイス研究者であると同時に、先鋭的な映画理論誌『スクリーン』の中心メンバーのひとりとして、シャープなゴダール論の書き手でもあるコリン・マッケイブは、斬新な視野から、今日ジョイスを読むことの可能性を追求する。構造主義/ポスト構造主義の成果を踏まえ、当時のアイルランドの政治状況を見据えつつ、自己同一性に還元されぬ〈複数の主体〉への果敢なアプローチを試み続けた“政治的ジョイス像”を鮮やかに浮き上がらせる。――いま、改めてジョイスに向かい合うべき時が来ている。
JJBN:COSTELLO-1992
Costello, Peter. James Joyce: The Years of Growth 1882-1915. London: Kyle Cathie, 1992.
CONTENTS
Illustrations (86-87, 278-279)
Preface
Prologue: 'On the Last Day . . .'
PART ONE
1 The Dead
PART TWO
2 'Baby Tuckoo'
3 Clongowes Wood
4 Bray adn Eileen
5 The Shadow of Parnell
6 The City
7 Belvedere
8 Sin and Savation
PART THREE
9 The Summer of 1898
PART FOUR
10 On St Stephen'S Green
11 The Drama of Life
PART FIVE
12 Interlude: 'Emma Clery'
PART SIX
13 Faubourg St Patrice
14 A Bowl of Green Bile
15 Stephen Dedalus
PART SEVEN
16 'Nora'
PART EIGHT
17 Dubliners on the Adriatic
18 Rome: An Infernal Machine
19 A Portrait of the Artsit
20 The Haunted Inkbottle
21 Exiles
PART NINE
22 The Living and the Dead
Appendeix I: Joyce's Holoscope
Appendix II:
Family Trees
Pedigree of Stephen
James Joyce
The Flynn Family
The Murray Family
The O'Connell Family
James Joyce's Immediate Family
James Joyce's Genetic Make-Up
Bibliography
Notes on Sources
Acknowledgements
Index
JJBN: NORRIS-1992
Norris, Margot. Joyce’s Web: The Social Unraveling of Modernism. Austin: U Texas P, 1992.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
PART I. THE ARTIST
Chapter 1. Texual Raveling: A Critical and Theoretical Introduction
1. Joycean Canonization and Modernism
2. Joyce, Feminism, and the Ideologically Self-Critical Text
3. Intertexted Weavings
Chapter 2. Patronage and Censorship: The Production of Art in the Social Real
1. Patronage as Communist “Grace”
2. Ibsen, Censorship, and Art’s Social Function in Stephen Hero
Chapter 3. Stephen Dedalus, Oscar Wilde, and the Art of Lying
Chapter 4. “Shem the Penman”: Joyce’s Tenemental Text
1. Cranly, Materialism, and Art
2. Shem as Bête Noire of Modernism
PART II. THE WOMEN
Chapter 5. “Who killed Julia Morkan?”: The Gender Politics of Art in “The Dead”
1. Stifled Back Answers
2. The Woman as Objet d’Art
3. Woman as the Other Woman
4. Songs, Romance, and the Social Real
5. The Silencing of Female Art
Chapter 6. Narration under a Blindfold: Reading the “Patch” of “Clay”
Chapter 7. The Work Song of the Washerwomen in “Anna Livia Plurabelle”
1. Samuel Butler and the Desublimation of Myth
2. The Social Politics of Washerwomen in History
3. Washerwomen’s Working Talk
4. Ablution and Absolution
Chapter 8. Modernism, Myth, and Desire in “Nausicaa"
PART III. THE CHILDREN
Chapter 9. The Politics of Childhood in “The Mime of Mick, Nick, and the Maggies”
1. Tea Parties
2. Exile
3. Home
Notes
Works Consulted
Index
JJBN: CAREY AND JEWINSKI-1992
Carey, Phyllis and Ed Jewinski, editors. RE: JOYCE’N BECKETT. New York: Fordham UP, 1992.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgement
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Richard Ellmann’s James Joyce and Deirdre Bair’s Samuel Beckett: A Biography: The Triumphs and Trials of Literary Biography
MELVIN FRIEDMAN
2. Joyce, Beckett and the Short Story in Oreland
JOHN FLETCHER
3. Beckett, Joyce, and Irish Writing: The Example of Beckett’s “Dubliners” Story
JOHN HARRINGTON
4. “For This Relief Much Thanks”: Leopold Bloom and Beckett’s Use of Allusion.
DAVID COHEN
5. Beckett Re-Joycing: Words and Music.
JAMES ACHESON
6. “The More Joyce Knew the More He Could and “More Than I could”: Theology and Fictional Technique in Joyce and Beckett
ALAN S. LOXTERMAN
7. Textually Uninhibited: The Playfulness of Joyce and Beckett.
MICHAEL PATRICK GILLESPIE
8. Stephen Dadalus, Balacqua Shuah, and Dante’s Pieta
PHYLLIS CAREY
9. Krapping Out: Images of Flow and Elimination as Creation in Joyce and Beckett
SUSAN BRIENZA
10. Authorship, Authority, and Self-Reference IN Joyce and Beckett
STEVEN CONNOR
11. James Joyce and Samuel Beckett: From Epiphany to Anti-Epiphany
ED JEWINSKI
12. Beckett et Joyce et Beckett-esque: A One-Act Play
DENIS REGAN
13. Joyce and Beckett: A preliminary Checklist of Publications
JOHN P. HARRINGTON
About the Contributors
Index
ABOUT THE BOOKS
This ground-breaking collection of essays combines the efforts of twelve contributors to explore previously uncharted paths in the literary relationship between James Joyce and Samuel Beckett, two of the foremost writers of the twentieth century. Eleven essays, written by scholars from Canada, England, the United States, and New Zealand, throw new light on the biographies, texts, techniques, and artistic consciousness of Joyce and Beckett as well as on fundamental questions of literary authority and influence. In addition, the volume contains the first working bibliography devoted exclusively to the Joyce-Beckett relationship. The collection culminates with an original one-act play that celebrates both writers in, with, and through the language that they each explored so profoundly.
The eleven essays provide a number of avenues for discussing the literary relationship between Joyce and Beckett: Melvin Friedman assesses the strengths and weaknesses of the Joyce and Beckett biographies by Richard Ellmann and Deidra Bair. John Fletcher and John P. Harrington provide complementary studies of two of Beckett’s early short stories in relation to their possible “counterparts” in Dubliners. James Acheson and David Cohen both draw on Ulysses and various works by Beckett to focus attention on links and divergencies between the two writers in their uses of allusions. Analyzing fictional techniques, Michael Patrick Gillespie foregrounds the impulse for gaming that Joyce and Beckett both employ as a narrative strategy. Alan Loxterman explores the techniques both writers use to raise Phyllis Carey provide complementary reading of artistic consciousness, Brienza drawing attention to bodily fluids and elimination as images of creation, and Carey focusing on the divergent debts of both writers to Dante. Finally, Steven Connor and Ed Jewinski attack the problems od “authority” and “influence,” respectively, in the process illuminating differences in modernist and postmodernist understandings of theses concepts.
A bibliography of well over one hundred entries, compiled by John P. Harrington, lists the most substantive discussions of the Joyce Beckett relationship Denis Regan’s one-act play, Beckett relationship. Denis Regan’s one act play, Becket et Joyce et Beckettesque, creates a medley od Beckett and Joyce echoes through imaginative dialogues in the afterlife mind of Samuel Beckett. Although the volume was in progress when Samuel Beckett died in December 1989, it now serves as a memorial and a tribute to both Samuel Beckett and James Joyce.
PHYLLIS CAREY is Associate Professor of English at Mount Mary College, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She has published on Joyce and Beckett in the James Joyce Quarterly, has delivered papers on Joyce-Beckett panels in Frankfurt and Milwaukee, and has published several essays on Beckett. She is currently co-editing a collection of essays on Seamus Heaney and working on a book-length study of Beckett and Vaclav Havel.
ED Jewenski is Associate Professor of English at Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario. He is the co-editor of Magic Realism in Canadian Literature and has published articles on Beckett, Lawrence, and several Canadian writers, including Leacock, Livesay, Birney, and Pratt. He has served on the editorial board of The English Quarterly, Jewish Dialogue, and The New Quarterly.
JJBN: WALES-1992
Wales, Katie. The Language of James Joyce. London: Macmillan, 1992.
CONTENTS
Preface
Acknowledgement and Editions Used
Abbreviations and Symbols
1 Joyce and Irish English
1.1 Introduction: The History of English in Ireland
1.2 Joyce and Hiberno-English
1.3 Joyce and Anglo-Irish Literature
1.4 Conclusion: The Joycean Paradox
2 Joyce and Rhetoric: Dubliners and A Portrait of tech Artist as a Young Man
2.1 Introduction: Joyce and Rhetoric
2.2 Repetition in Dubliners
2.3 Emotive Rhetoric in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
2.4 Conclusion: A Portrait of the Artist as a Rhetorician
3 Joyce's Voices in Ulysses
3.1 The Voices of Ulysses
3.2 'The Steady Monologue of the Interiors' (FW: 119)
3.3 The 'Inner Voices' of Stephen Daedalus and Leopolod Bloom
3.4 The Female Voice: Molly's Monologue
3.5 Conclusion: The Dialogue of Voices in Ulysses
4 The Play of Language in Ulysses
4.1 Introduction: Joyce and the Lidic(rous)
4.2 The Play of Sound and Symbol
4.3 Dislocations of Syntax
4.4 Lexical Creativity
4.5 Licenses of Meaning
4.6 Comic Word-Play
4.7 The Art of Parody
4.8 Conclusion: A Portrait of the Artist as a Joker
5 The 'ideal Reader' of Finnegans Wake
5.1 Introduction: To Read, or Not to Read . . .
5.2 The Reader's Progress to Finnegans Wake
5.3 Putting the Language to Sleep
5.4 Here Comes Everything: Endlessly Repeated
5.5 'The Key to. Given!' (FW: 628)
5.6 Conclusion: The 'Ideal Reader of Finnegans Wake Appendix to Chapter 5
Notes
Further Reading
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
The Language of James Joyce offers the First comprehensive survey of Joyce's language since Anthony Burgess's Joysprick in 1973, and offers an up-to-date approach in the light of recent work in stylistics, feminist theory and Bkhtinian theory of the novel. It also attempts to place Joyce's work very clearly in the Anglo-Irish tradition, and offers a detailed chapter therefore on Joyce's use of Hiberno-English. The book is written specifically for undergraduate student s and general readers interested in Joyce who may lack a linguistic background. None the less the book aims to show that no student Joyce can afford to ignore such an important dimension of his writing.
JJBN: CHENG&MARTIN-1992
Cheng, Vincent J. and Timothy Martin, editors. Joyce in Context. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1992.
CONTENTS
List of illustrations
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Editors' introduction
1 The 1989 conference: a retrospect
Timothy Martin
PART I THE MODERNIST CONTEXT
2 Is there a case against Ulysses?
Denis Donoghue
3 Woolf and Joyce: reading and re/vision
Johanna X. K. Garvy
4 Joyce and Ford Madox Ford
Vincent J. Cheng
5 Joyce and Freud: discontent and its civilizations
Brian W. Shaffer
PART II THE CONTEXT OF THE OTHER: JOYCE ON THE MARGINS
6 Cheating on the father: Joyce and gender justice in Ulysses
Colleen R. Lamos
7 Demythologizing nationalism: Joyce's dialogized Grail myth
Theresa O'Connor
8 Joyce and Michelet: why watch Molly menstruate?
Bonnie Kime Scott
9 Re-visioning Joyce’s masculine signature
Suzette Henke
PART III CONTEXTS FOR JOYCE
10 "Scrupulous meanness" reconsidered: Dubliners as stylistic parody
Roy Gottfried
11 Joyce and Lacan: the twin narratives of History and His[S]tory in the "Nestor" chapter of Ulysses
Garry M . Leonard
12 Joyce and Homer: return, disguise, and recognition in "Ithaca"
Constance V. Tagopoulos
13 James Joyce and cartoons
Dan Schiff
PART IV RE-READING JOYCE: JOYCE IN HIS OWN CONTEXT
14 Refining himself out of existence: the evolution of Joyce's aesthetic theory and the drafts of A Portrait
Ian Crump
15 Entering the lists: sampling early catalogues
Fritz Senn
16 Cataloguing in Finnegans Wake: counting counties
Bernard Benstock
17 Translating Ulysses, East and West
Di Jin
Index
JJBN: FAIRHALL-1993
Fairhall, James. James Joyce and the Question of History. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1993.
CONTENTS
List of illustrations
Preface
List of abbreviations
Introduction: What is History?
1 The murders in the park
2 Literary politics
3 The paralyzed city
4 Growing into history
5 Ulysses and the Great War
6 Reforming the wor(l)d
7 Afterword: language and history
Notes
Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
This ground-breaking book examines the work of James Joyce as a response to Irish and European history. Fairhall situates Joyce in his historical moment and explores Joyce's attitudes towards colonialism, nationalism, World War I, gender, and class. Although the book draws on a wide range of critical theories, it is clearly written and is accessible to any reader interested in the relation between Joyce's works and history.
'An exemplary analysis ... No reader of Joyce could fail to benefit from this discussion.'
Irish Studies Review
'An excellent book. To the vexed question of the political dimensions of Joyce's writings it brings an awareness of the complexity of the relation between literary texts and historical contexts, while at the same time providing historical material that will enrich readings of his works.'
Derek Attridge
JJBN: FRIEDMAN-1993
Friedman, Susan Stanford, ed. Joyce: The Return of the Repressed. Ithaca and London: Cornell UP, 1993.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations for Texts by James Joyce
Introduction
Susan Stanford Friedman
PART I Making the Artist of Modernity: Stephen Hero, Portrait, Ulysses
1 (Self)Censorship and the Making of Joyce’s Modernism
Susan Stanford Friedman
2 Pharmaconomy: Stephen and the Daedalids
Alberto Moreiras
PART II Repression and the Return of Cultural History: Dubliners and Portrait
3 Uncanny Returns in “The Dead”: Ibsenian Intertexts and the Estranged Infant
Robert Spoo
4 A Portrait of the Romantic Poet as a Young Modernist: Literary History as Textual Unconscious
Jay Clayton
5 Simon’s Irish Rose: Famine Songs, Blackfaced Minstrels, and Woman’s Repression in A Portrait
Richard Pearce
PART III Narratives of Gender, Race, and Sex: Ulysses
6 Races and Chains: The Sexuo-Racial Matrix in Ulysses
Laura Doyle
7 Staging Sexuality: Repression, Representation, and “Interior” States in Ulysses
Joseph A. Boone
PART IV Incest, Narcissism, and the Scene of Writing: Ulysses and Finnegans Wake
8 The Preservation of Tenderness: A Confusion of Tongues in Ulysses and Finengans Wake
Marilyn L. Brownstein
9 Texual Mater: Writing the Mother in Joyce
Ellen Carol Jones
10 Mothers of Invention/Doaters of Inversion: Narcissan Scenes in Finnegans Wake
Christine Froula
Notes on Contributors
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
“A vital collection that skillfully combines analysis of the art of Joyce and the ideas of Freud with the exciting new insights of cultural criticism. The quality of the essay is extraordinarily high, and this synthesis of Freud and social issues suits the latest trends in a powerful way.”
―Sheldon Brivic, Temple University
Did James Joyce, that icon of modernity, spearhead the dismantling of the Cartesian subject? Or was he a supreme example of a modern man forever divided and never fully known to himself?
This volume reads the dialogue of contradictory cultural voices in Joyce's works – revolutionary and reactionary, critical and subject to critique, marginal and central. It includes ten essays – all but two of them published here for the first time – that identify repressed elements in Joyce's writings and examine how psychic and cultural repressions persistently surface in his texts. Individual chapters explore interconnections among the psychic and the political, the textual and the historical, theerotic and the linguistic in Stephen Hero, Dubliners, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Ulysses, and FinnegansWake. Adapting divergent methodologies, the essays employ interpretive strategies drawn from psychoanalytic criticism, feminist criticism, new historicism, deconstruction, narrative theory, Marxism, and cultural studies.
The first collection of psychoanalytically oriented essays devoted entirely to Joyce, this book will be invaluable for students and scholars of literary theory, psychoanalytic and feminist criticism, and cultural studies, and others with an interest in literary modernism and Irish literature.
CONTRIBUTORS: Joseph A. Bone. Marylyn L. Brownstein. Jay Clayton. Laura Doyle. Susan Stanford Friedman. Christine Froula. Ellen Carol Jones. Alberto Moreiras. Richard Pearce. Robert Spoo.
SUSAN STANFORD FREIDMAN is Virginia Woolf Professor of English and Women’s Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She is also the author of Psyche Reborn: The Emergence of H.D. and Penelope’s Web: Gender, Modernity, H.D.’s Fiction and the coeditor, with Rachel Blau DuPlessis, of Signets: Reading H.D.
JJBN: SEGALL-1993
Segall, Jeffery. Joyce in America: Cultural Politics and the Trials of Ulysses. Berkeley: U of California P, 1993.
CONTENTS
Introduction: The Polemics of Our Portraits.
1. "James Joyce or Socialist Realism?" Marxist Aesthetics and the Problem of Ulysses
2. "Kulturbolschewismus Is Here": Joyce and American Cultural Conservatism
3. Between Marxism and Modernism: Joyce and the Dissident Left
4. "On the Side of the Angels": Joyce and the New Critics
5. The High Priest of Their Imagination: Joyce and His Catholic Critics
Conclusion: The Politics of Parallax, or the Transubstantiation of Joyce's Political Soul
Notes
Works Cited
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
"We must understand the controversy that enveloped Ulysses during the 1920s and 1930s as a demonstration of both its real and its symbolic powers of provocation. Readers praised or denounced it for what it was (as much as they could construe this) as well as for what it represented (often determined without the benefit—or burden—of having read it). It was difficult to separate Ulysses from the aura of notoriety surrounding it, a task made more difficult by the novel's obscurity (particularly in the years before the publication of Stuart Gilbert's James Joyce's "Ulysses" in 1930) and by its unavailability. American readers in particular often viewed Ulysses as symptomatic of a host of social, cultural, and political changes they deplored. Judgments for or against Ulysses frequently reflected a critic's own hope or anxiety over an age in which, as Marx had prophesied, all that was solid seemed to be melting into air. Ulysses became a cultural nexus over which critics with opposed ideological perspectives did battle."
In America, allegations that Ulysses was both obscene and blasphemous heightened interest in it and created controversy even before it was permitted to be published in 1933. Moralists and ideologues from various quarters found in Ulysses an amorphous but still attractive target for their suspicions and outrage. Three issues of the Little Review , which serialized Ulysses from 1918 to 1920, were seized and banned by the U.S. Post Office, and in September, 1920, the New York Society for the Prevention of Vice lodged an official complaint against its editors, Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap. In February of 1921, Heap and Anderson were convicted of publishing obscenity, fined fifty dollars, and prohibited from publishing additional chapters from Ulysses . It was not until Judge John M. Woolsey's historic decision lifting the ban on Ulysses on December 6, 1933 (upheld by the District Court of Appeals on August 8, 1934) that Ulysses could be legally published and sold in America "(Introduction, ii-iii)
JJBN: STANISLAUS-JOYCE-1993
スタニスロース・ジョイス『兄の番人―若き日のジェイムズ・ジョイス』宮田恭子訳、みすず書房 1993年
⇒原著 Joyce, Stanislaus. My Borther's Keeper. The Viking P, 1969.
CONTENTS
序文 T.S. エリオット
序論 リチャード・エルマン
第一章 土壌
第二章 発芽
第三章 早春
第四章 成熟
第五章 開花
原注
訳者解説
索引
ABOUT THE BOOK
「本書は、有名な作家と、その存在を世に知られることのなかった弟の関係を見事に描いている。……私はこの本を二回読んだ……兄の回想というテーマにとりつかれたスタニスロースは、肌に刺さった刺に苛立ちながらも、彼自身作家となり、兄の作品と並んで書架に永遠の座を占める本の著者となった」(T.S. エリオット)
スタニはつねに兄の間近にいて行動を共にし、ジェイムズの言動を注視した、余人には不可能な弟の視点から、彼は兄の宗教観の推移やアル中の父親への愛情、家族関係、読書・創作歴、イェイツ等との交友関係、さらに性生活までをも詳細に語り、独自の見解を述べている。とりわけ『ダブリンの人びと』や『若き芸術家の肖像』の成立背景を明らかにしている本書は、作家の幼少期から大陸に移り住むまでのダブリン時代を扱ったユニークな回想録であると同時に、この天才の文学理解に欠かせぬ基本的文献となっている。T.S.エリオットの序文とリチャード・エルマンの序論を一読すれば、本書の価値は一目瞭然である。
JJBN:KAWAGUCHI-1994
川口喬一『「ユリシーズ」演義』 研究社出版、1994.
目次
まえがき
第一章 マーテロ塔にて
「ワレ神ノ祭壇ニ赴カン」「二つの強く鋭いホイッスルが……」先行詞のない代名詞 情報伝達のギャップ ディエゲーシスとミメーシス 岸辺に何人の人物がいるか? 独白の中の引用文
第二章 デイジー校長の学校で
「ムネーモシュネーの娘たちが……」 授業風景 スティーヴンの月給
第三章 サンディマウントの浜辺にて
産婆のカバンと砂まみれの雨傘 プラムをかじる老婆たち 変容する人物たち 試作するスティーヴン 牧神の時 「三本マストの帆船が……」
第四章 ブルーム家の朝
ミスター・ブルームの朝の装束 ブルーム家の朝食 行き交う手紙たち 娘ミリーからの手紙 後架上の芸術家ブルーム
第五章 街を行くヘンリー・フラワー
郵便局のほうへ マーサ・クリフォードからの手紙 薬局へ行くレオポルド・ブルーム アスコット・ゴールド・カップ競馬
第六章 グラスネヴィン墓地に向けて
葬儀車は行く 「彼は午後にやって来る」 父の死 艀に乗った男は誰か? 視界から消えるブルーム 一三番目の男は誰か? ブルームは独り
第七章 新聞社にて
新聞の見出しのもとに 職業人ブルーム 電話をするブルーム ブルーム退場 起源なき反復――デイジー校長の投稿論文 レネハンの競馬情報 ムーニー酒場へ ブルームとスティーヴン――語りの多層化 見出し――テクストを切り裂くもう一つの声
第八章 昼飯どきのブルーム
チラシとカモメ 移動するメッセージ 「あのころは幸せだった」 ホウス岬の羊歯の陰で ブルームの終末意識 迫りくるボイランの時間 ブルームの懐中時計――もう一つの装具 「クロース・エンカウンター」――ボイランがいる
第九章 図書館にて
伝記的解釈 シェイクスピア論 アントラクト(幕間狂言) ジャンルの越境 戯れる語り手 すれ違うスティーヴンとブルーム
第一〇章 ダブリンの人びと
一九の基本的情景 コンミー神父――持続する物語 同時性と異所性 一組の男女 モリーとボイラン 立ち読みするミスター・ブルーム 排除としての意識の流れ ダブリン城の馬車と救急車――因果律と偶発性 アイルランド総監のお通りだ
第一一章 オーモンド・ホテルにて
序曲あるいはオーケストラ・チューニング 二つのテクストの並列 盗用する語り手 合流するテクストたち リリリン・シャラリン――移動するボイラン 注文する人/給仕する人 「メット・ヒム・パイク・ホージズ」 手紙を書くブルーム 遠ざかる音/近づく音 トン・トン・トン――ピアノ調律師が戻って来る ルル・プルル――退場するブルーム
第一二章 キアナンの酒場にて
一人称の語り――語るのは誰か 一つ目巨人の洞窟にて またしてもブルーム夫人 「国家とは何だと思いますか?」 噂の中のブルーム――ユダヤ性 パロディ――昇天するエリヤ・ブルーム ジョイスの文体練習――三三のパロディ集 パロディの動機 アンチ・ナレーションに向けて はじめにパロディありき
第一三章 ふたたびサンディマウントの浜辺にて
初夏の夕暮れ ガーティ・マクダウェル 教会と浜辺――並列する描写 蹴られたボール おお罪人よ!――テクストの交接 懐中時計と花火 現象学者ブルームの考察 モリーとマルヴィーとボイランとブルーム ガーティは誰か 浜辺の謎の男について ディエゲーシスの残滓 夕刊を買うディグナム少年 砂に書かれたメッセージ
第一四章 産院にて
産院での出来事 文体の歴史――言語の不透明化 ブルームと六人の仲間たち バニヤンの説話物語 マリガンとバノンの登場 スターン的「ドゥーブル・アンタンドル」 ゴシック・ロマンス――ヘインズの亡霊 ルビー色の三角印 ブルームとスティーヴンの出会い 最後の御言葉――バークの店へ!
第一五章 夜の街にて
プロローグ――幽鬼の街へ ブルーム登場 地獄の門に向けて――裁かれるブルーム 娼家の戸口にて――ジャガイモを失うブルーム 新しき女性的男性と偽救世主 ブルームとスティーヴン――幻想の並列 偽雨合羽の男――ボイラン? 娼家の女将ベラ・コーエン 娼家での支払い 「どこかで手を怪我したらしい」 ブルームの夢/スティーヴンの夢 死の舞踏 黒ミサ――「ダブリン燃える」
第一六章 御者溜まりにて
既製品としての言語 確認される情報――再登場する人物 「名前がなんだ」――船乗りマーフィーの法螺話 プリマドンナ――色あせた一枚の写真 「アイルランドが大切なわけは……」 新聞を読むブルーム 家路をたどるブルーム父子(?)
第一七章 ふたたびブルーム家にて
教理問答 ブルーム家に向けて 鍵を持たぬ二人 食器戸棚の中身 引きちぎられた馬券 語りの無償性 ストゥーム/ブリーヴン 滞在の勧め 裏庭――荒野への脱出 居間のブルーム 収支決算書 引き出しの中身 エピローグ
第一八章 女/性のファンタジー
「明日の朝食はベッドで」 最後の交渉 ボイランとの情事 ジブラルタルの思い出 誤用作者モリー 歌うモリー ブルームの恋文 「倒錯者」ブルーム スティーヴンについて ロードデンドロンの
茂みの中で
あとがき
索引(主要人物・主要項目)
帯より
ジョイスの傑作『ユリシーズ』全18章の言葉と物語を読む
出版後70年、つねに話題作であり続けた『ユリシーズ』。しかしわれわれはこの世紀の問題作について、その物語性、そのテクスト性について、どれだけのことを知っているだろうか。著者は長年の『ユリシーズ』との付き合いに基づいて、華麗に変容するジョイスの言葉たちがつぎつぎに豊かな物語を紡いでいくありさまを、その基本から語る。
著者の「あとがき」から
もちろんこの作品(『ユリシーズ』)についてはこちたき議論が世に溢れている。優れた研究所も少なくない。しかし、これがいかに面白い、物語性とテクスト性に溢れ、習慣性の毒をいかに多量に含むものであるかを、きちんと基本から語った本はない。作品のあちこちを拾い読みするだけで、生かじりの最新の文学理論をつきあわせ、『ユリシーズ』は「アンリーダブル」であるなどとまことしやかな説を吹聴するのではなく、まず物語の面白さ、そこに使われている言葉の豊かさを語ること、これが本書の狙いであった。
JJBN:DUFFY-1994
Duffy, Enda. The Subaltern Ulysses. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1994.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Notes on the Text
Introduction: Postcolonialism and Modernism: The Case of Ulysses
Notes
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
In the years between 1914 and 1921, as Joyce was composing Ulysses, Ireland became the first colony of the British Empire to gain its independence in this century after a violent anticolonial war. Duffy juxtaposes Ulysses against documents and photographs from the archives of both empire and insurgency, as well as against recent postcolonial literary texts, in order to analyze the political unconscious of subversive strategies, including twists on class and gender, that render patriarchal colonialist culture unfamiliar.
Ulysses, Duffy argues, is actually a guerrilla text, and he demonstrates how Joyce's novel pinpoints colonial regimes of surveillance, mocks imperial stereotypes of the "native," exposes nationalism and other chauvinisitic ideologies of "imagined community" as throwbacks to the colonial ethos, and proposes versions of a postcolonial subject. A significant intervention in the massive "Joyce industry" founded on the rhetoric and aesthetics of high modernism, Duffy's insights show us both Ulysses and the origins of postcolonial textuality in a startling new way.
Enda Duffy is assistant professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
NOTES
90年代に多く出版されたポストコロニアル批評のひとつである本書は、『ユリシーズ』が執筆されていたまさにその時にアイルランドで頻発していた武装蜂起とテクストの関係を明らかにする。『ユリシーズ』は1904年のある一日を描いているが、その10年後~15年後にジョイスによって遡及的に書かれた。1904年時点では1916年のイースター蜂起に代表される激しい武装蜂起は起きていないが、それらの出来事はうっすらと影のようにテクストをつきまっており、その影響を無視することはできないとダフィは主張する。各章の冒頭で内戦に関わる史料などを掲載し、その強烈なイメージに引きつけるようにして議論を展開していくのはダフィの書き方の大きな特徴であるが、そこにジョイスを政治の土台へと引き入れようとする気概が感じられる。批評用語が解説もなく使われている点、難解ではあるが、『ユリシーズ』執筆時の現実世界のダブリンとジョイスのフィクションのダブリンを並置する視点はジョイスに政治を読み込む際には欠かせないものだろう。(H)
JJBN: SCHWARZ-1994
Schwarz, Daniel R., ed. James Joyce The Dead: Complete, Authoritative Text with Biographical and Historical Contexts, Critical History, and Essays from Five Contemporary Critical Perspectives. Boston: Bedford / St. Martin’s, 1994 .
CONTENTS
About the Series
About This Volume
PART ONE “The Dead”: The Complete Text
Introduction: Biographical and Historical Contexts
The Complete Text
PART TWO “The Dead”: A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism
A Critical History of “The Dead”
Psychoanalytic Criticism and “The Dead”
What Is Psychoanalytic Criticism?
Psychoanalytic Criticism: A Selected Bibliography
A Psychoanalytic Perspective:
DANIEL R. SCHWARZ, Gabriel Conroy’s Psyche: Character as Concept in Joyce’s “The Dead”
Reader-Response Criticism and “The Dead”
What Is Reader-Response Criticism?
A Reader-Response Criticism: A Selected Bibliography
A Reader-Response Perspective:
PETER J. RABINOWITZ, “A Symbol of Something”: Interpretive Vertigo in “The Dead”
The New Historicism and “The Dead”
What Is the New Historicism?
The New Historicism: A Selected Bibliography
A New Historicist Perspective:
MICHAEL LEVENSON, Living History in “The Dead”
Feminist Criticism and “The Dead”
What Is Feminist Criticism?
Feminist Criticism: A Selected Bibliography
A Feminist Perspective:
MARGOT NORRIS, Not the Girl She Was at All: Women in “The Dead”
Deconstruction and “The Dead”
What Is Deconstruction?
Deconstruction: A Selected Bibliography
A Deconstructionist Perspective:
JOHN PAUL RIQUELME, For Whom the Snow Taps: Style and Repetition in “The Dead”
Glossary of Critical and Theoretical Terms
About the Contributors
ABOUT THE BOOK
About this volume
This edition of Joyce’s classic short story from Dubliners presents the 1969 Viking critical edition, prepared by Robert Scholes, along with five critical essays – newly commissioned or
revised for a student audience – that read The Dead from five contemporary critical perspectives:
Psychoanalytic Criticism by Daniel R. Schwarz
Reader-Response Criticism by Peter J. Rabinowitz
The New Historicism by Michael Levenson
Feminist Criticism by Margot Norris
Deconstruction by Jean Paul Riquelme
Each critical essay is accompanied by a succinct introduction to the history, principles, and practice of the critical perspective, and by a bibliography that promotes further exploration of that approach.
In addition, the text and essays are complemented by an introduction providing biographical and historical contexts to Joyce and The Dead, a survey of critical responses to the novel
since its initial publication, and a glossary of critical and theoretical terms.
JJBN: GIBSON-1994
Gibson, Andrew, ed. European Joyce Studies 3: Reading Joyce’s “Circe.” Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1994.
CONTENTS
Bibliographical Note
Introduction
Andrew Gibson
Ulysses 15 and the Irish Literary Theatre
L.H. Platt
“Circe” as Harking Back in Provective Arrangement
Fritz Senn
‘Jigajiga…Yummyyum…Pfuiiiiiii!...Bbbbblllllblblblblobschb!’ “Circe’s” Ventriloquy
Steven Connor
‘Toft’s Cumbersome Whirligig’: Hallucinations, Theatricality and Mnemotechnic in V.A.19 and the First Edition Text of “Circe”
R.G. Hampson
‘Strangers in my House, Bad Manners to Them!’: England in “Circe”
Andrew Gibson
‘Everything’ in "Circe"
Richard Brown
‘Bloom Passes Through Several Walls’: The Stage Directions in “Circe”
Katie Wales
Appendix: The Deliverer and Ulysses 15
L.H. Platt
JJBN: THORNTON-1994
Thornton, Weldon. The Antimodernism of Joyce’s Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Syracuse : Syracuse UP, 1994.
CONTENTS
Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
1. Introduction
PART ONE Contexts
2. Literary Modernism
3. Joyce’s Assumptions and Aims
4. The Antimodernist Implications of the Bildungsroman
PART TWO A Portrait of the Artist
5. The Structures
6. The Verbal Simulation of Stephen’s Psychic Milieu
7. Motif/Complex/Allusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
JJBN: MARTIN-1990
Martin, Augustine, editor. James Joyce: The Artist and the Labyrinth. Ryan Publishing, 1990.
CONTENTS
The artist and the labyrinth / Augustine Martin
The language of Dubliners / TP Dolan
Joyce's legacy / Benedict Kiely
Dubliners / John McGahern
Survivors of Joyce / John Banville
A portrait of the artist as a young man / Deirdre Bair
Stephen's green : the image of Ireland in Joyce / Colbert Kearney
The poet Joyce / Eamon Grennan
Directing "Exiles" / Vincent Dowling
The rhythm of Ulysses / Clive Hart
Joyce and Homer : seeing double / Barbara Hardy
The ghosts of Ulysses / Maud Ellman
Finnegan's wake : night Joyce of a thousand tiers / Petr Skrabanek
Joyce and the folk imagination / Maureen Murphy
Joyce's precursors / A Norman Jeffares
Pound's Joyce, Eliot's Joyce / Denis Donoghue
Joyce's humanism / Brendan Kennelly
Joyce and Gogarty : royal and ancient, two hangers-on / Ulick O'Connor
JJBN: BENSOTCK-1994
Benstock, Bernard. Narrative Con/Texts in Dubliners. Macmillan P, 1994.
CONTENTS
A Note on the Text
Introduction: A Confluence of Texts
Narrative Strategies: The Teller in the Dubliners Tale
Narrative Gnomonics: The Spectres in the Tales
Symbolic Systems: Correspondences in the Tales
Pounds/Shillings/Pence: The Economics in the Tales
Double Binds: Talismans of Immaturity
Duplicitous Bonds: Talents of Maturity
Index
JJBN: NORRIS&FLINT-1994
Norris, David and Cark Flint. Joyce for Beginners. Icon Books, 1994.
ABOUT THE BOOK
James Joyce is one of the key innovators of modernism, along with such figures as Picasso, Schoenberg and Stravinsky. However, a myth of Joyce's "difficulty" has taken root which discourages many readers from approaching his work. This is a great pity, because Joyce's writings are deeply human, enormously comic and make compelling reading.;Although Joyce spent much of his life in self-imposed exile, all his writings are obsessively, microscopically focussed on Dublin's fair city. This book provides a beginner's map to the labyrinth of Joyce's visionary Dublin. It takes the reader step by step from the early stories, "The Dubliners", and his immensely readable novel, "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man", into the sprawling comic universe of "Ulysses" and finally to the mythic dreamworld of "Finnegan's Wake". This book aims to persuade the reader to overcome his or her doubts about tackling the Irish Sphinx.
JJBN: MIHHAIL-1990
Mikhail, E. H., editor. James Joyce: Interviews and Recollections. Macmillan P, 1990.
CONTENTS
Foreword by Frank Delaney
Acknowledgements
Introduction
A Note on the Text
Chronological Table
INTERVIEWS AND RECOLLECTIONS
A Sister Recalls Joyce in Dublin
May Joyce Monaghan
James Joyce at Belvedere College
John Francis Byrne
Reuben Didn't Admire James Joyce!
Francis Aylmer
'The White Bishop'
John Francis Byrne
'Diseases of the Ox'
John Francis Byrne
My School Friend, James Joyce
judge Eugene Sheehy
'An Extremely Clever Boy'
George Russell
'The Younger Generation is Knocking at My Door'
W. B. Yeats
'Joyce has Grit' Lady Gregory 19 'Jim's Character is Unsettled'
Stanislaus Joyce
James Joyce: a Portrait of the Artist
Oliver Stjohn Gogarry
The Beginnings of Joyce
William K. Magee [John Eglinton]
James Joyce as a Young Man
Padraic Colum
Joyce Among the Journalists
Piaras Biaslai
A Recollection of James Joyce
joseph Hone
James Joyce in Trieste
Italo Svevo
James Joyce: Two Reminiscences
Antonio Fonda Savio and Letizia Fonda Savio
Recollections of Joyce
Alessandro Francini Bruni
My First English Teacher
Mario Nordio
James Joyce: an Occasion of Remembrance
Nora Franca Poliaghi
Pappy Never Spoke of Jim's Books
Eileenjoyce Schaurek
Recollections of James Joyce
Frank Budgen
How I Published Ulysses
Sylvia Beach
The Joyce I Knew
Arthur Power
First Meeting with James Joyce
Wyndham Lewis
Visits with James Joyce
P. Beaumont Wadsworth
James Joyce in the Twenties
Morrill Cody
Joyce's Way of Life
Sylvia Beach
Afternoon with James Joyce
Fanny Butcher
I Met James Joyce
Nina Hamnelt
Joyce's Birthday Parties
Sisley Huddleston
At Lloyd Morris's Party
Glenway Wescott
A Drink with Joyce
Ernest Hemingway
With James Joyce
Robert McAlmon
The James Joyce I Knew
James Stephens
I Meet, in Time and Space, JamesJoyce
Robert Reid
At a Party with James Joyce
Caresse Crosby
James Joyce in Paris
Aldous Huxley
We Established No Intimacy
Richard Aldington
James Joyce
George Antheil
A Study of James Joyce
Elliot Paul
Visits fromJamesJoyce
Nancy Cunard
James Joyce: a Sketch
Desmond Harmsworth
James Joyce in Paris
Margaret Anderson
I Saw Joyce Only Once
Katherine Anne Porter
Homage to James Joyce
Eugene Jolas
Homage to James Joyce
Philippe Soupault
Homage to James Joyce
Thomas McGreevy
An Encounter with Joyce
Arthur Bliss
Joyce's Fiftieth Birthday
Rollo H. Myers
Joyce
Virgil Thomson
James Joyce in Paris
Harold Nicolson
James Joyce
Gerald Griffin
James Joyce: a First Impression
James Stern
The Joyces
Giorgio Joyce
Worth Half-a-Dozen Legations Kenneth Reddin
James Joyce in Paris Mary Colum
Some Recollections of James Joyce: in London
Sylvia Lynd
The Living Joyce
Louis Gillet
James Joyce as Man and Artist
C. P. Curran
Sisters of James Joyce Mourn for Two Brothers
Memoir of the Man
Arthur Power
Joyce's Burial
Hans Gasser
I Met James Joyce's Wife
Kees Van Hoek
James Joyce's 'Nurse' Remembers
Peter Lennon
Sister
May Joyce Monaghan
Ecce Puer
Stephen Joyce
Additional Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
This work attempts to provide a portrait of Joyce from many viewpoints, aiming at selecting those interviews and recollections that have not been reprinted as well as those that are not readily accessible. James Joyce was a self-centred man. Unlike Wilde and Behan, who were too busy living to write, Joyce, like O'Casey and Yeats, gave the totality of his life to his art. He did not find his diversion in his friends because of the exigencies of his work. However, he was not unsociable - he was capable of strong friendships and the number of people who knew him was enormous, as this collection tries to reflect.
JJBN: LERNOUT-1990-2
Lernout, Geert, editor. Finnegans Wake: Fifty Years. Editions Rodopi B. V., 1990.
CONTENTS
Bibliographical Note
Introduction
Geert Lemout
Reading Joyce's Notebooks?! Finnegans Wake From Within
David Hayman
In the buginning is the woid: James Joyce and Genetic Criticism
Claude Jacquet
Digressions of the Book for AlleMannen
Elisabeth Ruge, Reinhard Schafer, Dirk Vanderbeke
Vico's Method and its Relation to Joyce's
Klaus Reichert
Vexations of Group Reading: "transluding from the otherman"
Fritz Senn
Metaphors of the Quest in Finnegans Wake
Laurent Milesi
HCE and the Fall of Pelagius
Vincent Deane
ALP's "Sein" und "Zeit": Questions of Finnegans Wake's Being and Language in a Philosophical Context
Alan Roughley
The Letter! The Litter! The Defilements of the Signifier in Finnegans Wake
Hanjo Berressem
A Nice Beginning: On the Ulysses / Finnegans Wake Interface
Danis Rose & John O'Hanlon
JJBN: LEONARD-1993
Leonard, Garry. Reading Dubliners Again: A Lacanian Perspective. Syracuse UP, 1993.
CONTENTS
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Spilling Whiskey on the Corpus
Jacques Lacan and Dubliners
2. The Free Man's Journal
The Making of His[S]tory in "The Sisters"
3. The Detective and the Cowboy
Desire, Gender, and Perversion in "An Encounter" 56
4. The Question and the Quest
The Story of Mangan's Sister
5. Wondering Where All the Dust Comes From
Jouissance in "Eveline"
6. Living for the Other in "After the Race"
7. Men in Love
The Woman as Object of Exchange in "Two Gallants"
8. Ejaculations and Silence
Sex and the Symbolic Order in "The Boarding House"
9. "Why had he married the eyes in the photograph?"
The Gaze in "A Little Cloud"
10. In No Case Shall the Said Bernard Bernard Bodley Be...
Repetition and Being in "Counterparts"
11. Where the Corkscrew Was
The Purpose of Insignificance in Joyce's "Clay"
12. Love in the Third Person in "A Painful Case"
13. "It'll be all right when King Eddie comes"
The Pathetic Phallacy in "Ivy Day in the Committee Room"
14. Mrs. Kearney and the "Moral Umbrella" of Mr. O'Madden Burke
A Mother's Quest for the Phallus
15. "With God's grace I will rectify this and this"
Masculinity Regained in "Grace"
16. "Perhaps she had not told him the whole story"
The Woman as a Symptom of Masculinity in "The Dead"
17. Boxing My Own Corner
Notes
Works Cited
Index
JJBN: JOYCE-STANISLAUS-1994
Joyce, Stanislaus. The Complete Dublin Diary of Stanislaus Joyce, edited by George Healey, Anna Livia P, 1994.
CONTENTS
Preface
The Complete Dublin Diary
Postscript
JJBN: BLAMIRES-1996
Blamires, Harry. The New Bloomsday Book: A Guide Through Ulysses. Routledge, 1996.
CONTENTS
ABOUT THE BOOK
References
Conversion table
Introductory note
Preface to the third edition
The Bloom and Dedalus family trees
PART I
1 Telemachus
2 Nestor
3 Proteus
PART II
4 Calypso
5 Lotus Eaters
6 Hades
7 Aeolus
8 The Lestrygonians
9 Scylla and Charybdis
10 Wandering Rocks
11 Siren
12 Cyclops
13 Nausicaa
14Cow of the Sun
15 Circe
Part III
16 Eumacus
17 Ithaca
18 Penelope
Index
JJBN: WARNER-1993
Warner, John. Joyce's Grandfathers: Myth and History in Defoe, Smollett, Sterne, and Joyce. U of Georgia P, 1993.
CONTENTS
Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
I Myth, History, and Mediation
2 Mythic and Historic Time in Defoe
3 Mythic and Historic Language in Smollett
4 Mythic and Historic Plotting in Sterne
5 Time, Language, and Plot in Ulysses
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
Deriving its title from Stephen Dedalus's observation in "Ulysses" that the artist is the "father of all his race, the father of his own grandfather", "Joyce's Grandfathers" is a study of literary relationship and the ways in which a truly new work of art can shed new light on the themes and techniques of older ones. John M. Warner first places "Ulysses" within the tradition of the English novel and then reads the works of earlier writers - Defoe, Smollet and Sterne - "through the lens" of Joyce's masterpiece. The result is a significant addition to the study of both 18th- and 20th-century literature. Warner contends that Joyce's experimentation with narrative form was in large part a reaction against the realistic, diachronic mode of fiction that predominated during the 19th century. In Defoe, Smollet, and Sterne, Joyce found not only earlier challenges to that mode but also "a revolutionary nostalgia for myth that paralleled his own response to his rationalistic culture". Yet their works also revealed a clear responsiveness to historical circumstances, creating a tension between the timelessness of myth and the chronology of history.
Unlike the realists, these particular 18th-century novelists "did not try to conceal the tensions between the synchronic and diachronic thrusts of their fiction but rather explored them openly, unafraid of jagged edges and cacophonous effect". It was these explorations that Joyce found especially useful in the writing of "Ulysses". By compelling us to look backward and to see what he saw in his 18th-century forebears, Warner argues, Joyce "recreates" them for us. This study is thus as much an effort to recontextualise the writing of Defoe, Smollet, and Sterne as it is to place "Ulysses" within the tradition of the English novel. The usual mode of the literary historian is to locate the influence of an earlier work on a later one. By deliberately evoking a double perspective on literary history, however, Warner enables us to understand how Joyce both uses and creates a tradition for his novel - how he "fathers his own grandfathers".
JJBN: JACKSON&MCGINLEY-1993
Jackson, John Wyse and Bernard McGinley. James Joyce's Dubliners: An Annotated Edition. Sinclair-Stevenson, 1993.
CONTENTS
Map: North central Dublin
Introduction
Map: South central Dublin
Childhood
THE SISTERS
Irish Homestead version of "The Sisters'
AN ENCOUNTER
ARABY
Young Adulthood
EVELINE
AFTER THE RACE
Two GALLANTS
THE BOARDING HOUSE
Mature Life
A LITTLE CLOUD
COUNTERPARTS
CLAY
A PAINFUL CASE
Public Life
IVY DAY IN THE COMMITTEE ROOM
A MOTHER
GRACE
'The Dead'
THE DEAD
Acknowledgements
ABOUT THE BOOK
This brilliantly annotated and fully illustrated text, with over 300 line drawings and photographs, is the ultimate Joyce volume, a classic for Joyce and Dublin Lovers for years to come.
JJBN: SVEVO-1990
Svevo, Livia. Memoir of Italo Svevo, translated by Isabel Quigly. Marlboro P, 1990.
ABOUT THE BOOK
The writer Italo Svevo had many things in common with other writers: a long struggle for recognition; a mutually respectful friendship with a noteworthy author (in Svevo's case, James Joyce); and a long list of neuroses. His choice of a wife, however, was anything but common. Livia Veneziani Svevo tirelessly worked on her husband's behalf after his tragic early death and also penned this remarkable portrait of a serious artist and a loving (if quirky) marriage. Memoir of Italo Svevo illuminates its subject's darkly comic novels, telling the story of how a successful businessman in his middle age, obsessed with smoking as much as his abandoned literary ambitions, somehow became one of the great authors of the twentieth century.
JJBN: SCHOLES-1992
Scholes, Robert. In Search of James Joyce. U of Illinois P, 1992.
CONTENTS
Introduction 1
1. Stephen Dedalus: Eiron and Alazon 7
2. Textual Matters 16
Some Observations on the Text of Dubliners 17
Further Observations on the Text of Dubliners 34
Book Review: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man 52
3. Joyce and the Epiphany: The Key to the Labyrinth? 59
4. Stephen Dedalus, Poet or Aesthete? 70
5. James Joyce, Irish Poet 82
6. Joyce and Symbolism 100
7. Counterparts 109
8. Ulysses: A Structuralist Perspective 117
9. In Search of James Joyce 129
10. Semiotic Approaches to a Fictional Text: Joyce's "Eveline" 144
11. x/y Joyce and Modernist Ideology 161
12. In the Brothel of Modernism: Picasso and Joyce 178
Index 209
ABOUT THE BOOK
As Robert Scholes explains in his introduction, this volume is "a record of prolonged engagement with the riddle of Joyce." Beginning with his 1961 essay on Stephen Dedalus and moving chronologically to an impor- tant new essay on Joyce and Picasso, the book gradually reveals two stories: one of the author's evolving critical perspective on Joyce, and another about the changes in critical methods in literary study over three decades. Because each chapter begins with a new headnote situating the topic and Scholes's approach to it in relation to his own work and to the critical climate of the day, the sequencing alone contributes much to an understanding of the recent history of Joyce criticism. The essays detail the progress of an adventurous and flexible critic from an early New Critical wish to read Joyce's work as the product of a single extraordinary mind, through structural and semiotic approaches to the Joycean text, to essays that draw on a wider learning to locate Joyce and his work in the social and political context of modern cultural studies.
JJBN: HENKE-1990
Henke, Suzette A. James Joyce and the Politics of Desire. Routledge, 1990.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: Defusing the Patriarchal Can(n)on
1. Through a Cracked Looking-Glass: Desire and Frustration in Dubliners
2. Stephen Dedalus and Women: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Narcissist
3. Interpreting Exiles: The Aesthetics of Unconsummated Desire
4. Uncoupling Ulysses: Joyce’s New Womanly Man
5. Molly Bloom: The Woman’s Story
6. Reading Finnegans Wake: The Feminiairity which Breathes Content Ricorso: Anna Livia Plurabelle and Ecriture Feminine
Notes
Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
This title, first published in 1990, offers a feminist and psychoanalytic reassessment of the Joycean canon in the wake of Freud, Lacan, and Kristeva. The author centres her discussion of Ulysses, Dubliners, A Portrait of the Artist, Finnegans Wake, and Exiles around questions of desire and language and the politics of sexual difference.
Suzette Henke’s radical "re-vision" of Joyce’s work is a striking example of the crucial role feminist theory can play in contemporary evaluation of canonical texts. As such it will be welcomed by feminists and students of literature alike.
JJBN: HARKNESS-1990
Harkness, Marguerite. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: Voices of the Text. G. K. Hall & Co., 1990.
ABOUT THE BOOK
Written in an easy-to-read, accessible style by teachers with years of classroom experience, Masterwork Studies are guides to the literary works most frequently studied in high school. Presenting ideas that spark imaginations, these books help students to gain background knowledge on great literature useful for papers and exams. The goal of each study is to encourage creative thinking by presenting engaging information about each work and its author. This approach allows students to arrive at sound analyses of their own, based on in-depth studies of popular literature. Each volume: -- Illuminates themes and concepts of a classic text -- Uses clear, conversational language -- Is an accessible, manageable length from 140 to 170 pages -- Includes a chronology of the author's life and era -- Provides an overview of the historical context -- Offers a summary of its critical reception -- Lists primary and secondary sources and index.
JJBN: BRUNSDALE-1993
Brunsdale, Mitzi. James Joyce: A Study of the Short Fiction. Twayne Publishers, 1993.
CONTENTS
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xvii
Ireland's Bards xxi
PART 1. THE SHORT FICTION
Dubliners
Prelude 3
"The Sisters" 7
"Two Gallants" 14
"Ivy Day in the Committee Room"
"A Little Cloud"
"The Dead" 36
Interlude 47
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Interlude 52
The Artist as Child 56
The Adolescent Portrait 63 "The Obscene Hells of Our Holy Mother"
"Revealing Himself to Himself" 80
The Artist as Alchemist 87
Postlude 100
PART 2. THE WRITER
Introduction
"Ibsen's New Drama" 151
"Paris Notebook" 154
"A Portrait of the Artist"
"Pola Notebook" 165
Letters, 1905-1906
Stephen Hero 172
"Trieste Notebook"
Letters, 1913-1917
PART 3. THE CRITICS
Dubliners
Introduction
Brewster Ghiselin
Florence L. Walzl
Morris Beja
Mary T. Reynolds
Donald T. Torchiana 198
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Introduction
Harry Levin 202
Maurice Beebe
Wayne Booth
Marguerite Harkness 208
Suzette Henke
Patrick Parrinder 210
Bernard Benstock 212
Richard Brown
David W. Robinson 214
Richard F. Peterson
Chronology 221
Glossary of Roman Catholic Terminology
Selected Bibliography 247
Index
JJBN: KLEIN-1994
Klein, Scott. The Fiction of James Joyce and Wyndham Lewis: Monsters of Nature and Design. Cambridge UP, 1994.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Introduction: opposition and representation
1. The tell-tale Eye
2. The mirror and the razor
3. The cracked looking-glass of the master
4. Minds of the anti-collaborators
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THE BOOK
The literary relationship of James Joyce and Wyndham Lewis has previously been described in merely biographical terms. In The Fictions of James Joyce and Wyndham Lewis Scott W. Klein takes Wyndham Lewis's criticism of Ulysses in Times and Western Man and Joyce's implicit response to Lewis in Finnegans Wake as an emblematic opposition signalling significant textual relations within and between the fictions of the two authors. The seeing eye and the world, the creating mind and fiction, language and its aesthetic and political object, and the processes of history: all appear in the work of both Joyce and Lewis, as related thematic structures that raise questions about binarism, dialectic, and the reconciliation of opposites. Detailed examination of key texts by Joyce and Lewis reveals affiliations between the two writers, and offers insight into the politics and aesthetics of modernism.