Reading Ulysses

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Two things I took away from the Wake:

1) Even though all the words stayed mostly incomprehensible throughout, it's often easy to grasp the tone/discourse of the text. If it's a lesson, a flirty conversation, if it's satire, elegy, mystery, etc. So in some way you can just float along, and get an emotional experience out of it. And enough things recur to get a sort of grip on a sort of plot.

2) Nobody understands Finnegans Wake anyway, so you're free to just make up your own interpretation. While Ulysses seems a lot more settled, the meaning of Finnegan's Wake is still up for debate. To me, it seemed to be about the Irish Civil War in a lot of ways. Or something like that. About trauma, the way so much modernism is about trauma, but a very different trauma than WWI.

Frederik B, Thursday, 2 May 2024 21:35 (three weeks ago) link

finwake [dot] com!

The book comes alive when you read it aloud to yourself, it’s as much music as it is text

your dog is fed and no one cares (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 2 May 2024 22:26 (three weeks ago) link


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