Joyce's Ulysses: A Reader's GuideUlysses remains less widely read than most texts boasting such a canonical status, largely due to misunderstanding about how to read it, and this guide provides an easy to follow remedy. By showing how Joyce reacted to the historical and cultural context in which he was situated, the radical nature of his use of language is laid bare in a chapter-by-chapter analysis of Ulysses. This approach enables the student reader to read and enjoy the novel's plurality of styles and to understand the terms of critical debate surrounding the nature and significance of Joyce's novel. |
Contents
1 | |
10 | |
3 Reading Ulysses | 23 |
4 Critical Reception and Publishing History | 87 |
5 Adaptation Interpretation and Influence | 101 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Anglo-Irish anti-semitic artist becomes Bloom and Stephen Bloomsday Boylan British brother Budgen Calypso chapter character Circe colonial Conmee consciousness country’s critics cultural Cyclops day’s Deasy’s Dignam discourse Dublin Eccles St edition of Ulysses Eliot Ellmann English episode essays Eumaeus father fiction film follow Frank Budgen Gerty Gibson Haines Hamilton’s Homeric correspondence Hugh Kenner influence interpolations Ireland Irish Literary Revival Ithaca James Joyce Jewish journey Joyce’s novel Joyce’s writing Kenner Lacan language Lenehan Leopold Bloom Lestrygonians linguistic Lotus Eaters MacCabe mind modern Molly Bloom Molly’s Mulligan narrative voice Nestor Odysseus p.m. Place Paris Parnell parody Penelope play Plot political prose Proteus published reader reading Ulysses references seen sense sentence sexual Shakespeare Simon Dedalus sinthome Sirens song Stephen and Bloom Stephen Dedalus style stylistic suitors T. S. Eliot takes Telemachus textual thinking thoughts tion tradition Trieste walking Wandering Rocks words young