Reading Ulysses

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (258 of them)

How weird re this thread revive. I reread Chapters Two and Six last weekend.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 29 August 2020 17:45 (three years ago) link

Also, that article starts with a quote from the old folk song about Finnegan's wake, so this film, from 1966, could be seen as the 60s art-roots thing, like Dylan, The Band, Beefheart, Art Ensemble of Chicago's "Ancient To The Future" theme, ditto Sun Ra etc.---which is a roots thing itself, going back to early 20th Century development of jazz, also Picasso's fascination with African masks etc., also Joyce going beyond Dubliners, back to folk and even more ancient world classical elements, towards something new.

dow, Saturday, 29 August 2020 17:50 (three years ago) link

(The film, as described in this article, incl. scenes from folk song and book, also it was released in '66, so that's why I related it to Dylan etc.)

dow, Saturday, 29 August 2020 17:58 (three years ago) link

of course, all art is "an art-roots thing," in various ways---no doubt the Babylonians, Homer, Gospel-writers and (maybe especially King James's) translators were thinking to some extent, "Hey, cool material, all in the Public Domain---how can I bring out, what can I do with the best qualities?"---audiences to some extent "Go man Gogh!") But I'm trying to stay with thread-relevant specifics, however speculative.
Also, Joyce's eyes got even worse, and he came to rely on dictation, pressing his friends into service---Beckett, setting the record straight re being J.'s "secretary," which sounds like something you might get paid for, told his biographer Dierdre Barr that during one such session, another guy dropped by, and Joyce said, "Hello, Joe. Put that in: 'Hello Joe,'" and Beckett found this unnerving. But that kind of going with the flow, to whatever overall extent, might be another reason for reading it aloud, getting into it that way, in your own surroundings.

dow, Saturday, 29 August 2020 18:34 (three years ago) link

"It" being FW especially, but not only.

dow, Saturday, 29 August 2020 18:36 (three years ago) link

Think I might try reading some later Henry James aloud--the parts where he seems to be chanelling something and/or remixing on the fly, automatic writing? (Proust too, although he was one who might revise up to the last second, scribbling on galleys, layers on the fly, in search of time regained again and again, so the sense of seeming all fresh and inspired in the moment, the thing you're supposed to go for, gets screwed with, which is also an or the art thing in Modern times, to some extent: oooo, subversion!---Xgau on punks/rock&roll: "bored enough to fuck with it.")

dow, Saturday, 29 August 2020 18:44 (three years ago) link

But a form of idealism too! And sheer cussedness. Never just the one thing, which certainly seems true of Joyce.

dow, Saturday, 29 August 2020 18:46 (three years ago) link

Dow, I think the Beckett story was just that JJ said 'Come in' to a knock on the door. Maybe you read a different version. But I've also heard that this is a myth and no-one can find the relevant moment in FW.

I like both films but I couldn't quite follow your initial statement about Strick's. Both films are worth watching anyway. I never 2004's film BLOOM.

the pinefox, Sunday, 30 August 2020 10:16 (three years ago) link

I saw the 1967 movie: on VHS, across the bedroom, it was alright, walking around downtown and going out to the Baily Optic (quote here seemed relevant re painting)...Champlin and Ebert loved it, though Kael and Kaufman found it reductive. I'd like a re-do, more imaginative Did you have a question about these comments?

dow, Sunday, 30 August 2020 19:44 (three years ago) link

The basic black & white, shades of grey realism of the film , enhanced by seeing it across the room on VHS, vs thinking of a more fluid approach, streaming on laptop and headphones, maybe more involving that way (as Strick's film might be if taken in that way)

dow, Sunday, 30 August 2020 19:52 (three years ago) link

six months pass...

Had a dream last night in which a friend told me that a major feature of Ulysses is "the objectification of voices" so if I ever need an English lit thesis, I'm set.

lukas, Monday, 22 March 2021 01:10 (three years ago) link

Heart the 1967 film, but obviously doesn't come close to doing justice to the book. Really liked how updating to a 1960s Dublin setting has no effect on the believability of story, characters or general atmosphere- a quietly withering take on the de Valera republic.

Supergran: Wrath of Tub (Bananaman Begins), Tuesday, 23 March 2021 10:26 (three years ago) link

one year passes...

Sally Rooney on Ulysses.

https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2022/12/07/misreading-ulysses/

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 7 December 2022 16:23 (one year ago) link

The ineluctable modality of the risible

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Wednesday, 7 December 2022 20:14 (one year ago) link

good piece, not sure her general thesis re: ulysses debt to austen is as out there as she seems to think it is, but she's much better versed in lit crit than i

devvvine, Wednesday, 7 December 2022 23:30 (one year ago) link

"We might propose that, or we might not."

"Let’s return for just a moment to the plot summary I tried to offer at the beginning. Leopold Bloom does this and that, I explained, while Stephen Dedalus does that and this."

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 8 December 2022 08:34 (one year ago) link

seven months pass...

Chapter 9, which is mostly Stephen putting forth an elaborate theory on how Shakespeare's work is deep down all about his uncle having fucked his wife, and when asked "do you even believe this yourself?" answering with a content "no", felt very ILX.

Daniel_Rf, Sunday, 16 July 2023 08:59 (nine months ago) link

Chapter 12, a character expresses the worry that Ireland become "as treeless as Portugal". Portugal's pretty densely forested, I mean we have horrible forest fires every Summer for a reason! Googling the phrase only turns up Irish sources worried about deforestation, anyone know if this is some erudite joke that's going over my head?

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 27 July 2023 10:56 (eight months ago) link

alls i can think is that most of the characters in Cyclops are talking bullshit of one form or another

Let's talk about local tomatoes (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 27 July 2023 12:07 (eight months ago) link

Both countries underwent serious deforestation in the 18th and 19th centuries. The new independent Irish state started reforestation efforts (around the time of Ulysses's publication), and Portugal was reforested (more successfully) after WWII.

wmlynch, Friday, 28 July 2023 00:29 (eight months ago) link

this is right in the middle of talk about fenians (john wyse and the other guy are nationalists?) so i believe this is a reference to "the hanging tree". idk enough about irish or portugese politics but from 1834 - 1920ish portugese are having wars of "republicanism" (starts w/ "charterist rebellion" etc) and lots of executions happening right around when the book is written and set

according to the gifford concordance i bought because prof jon bishop i bought

CYCLOPS — ORGAN: muscle ART: politics SYMBOL: fenian TECHNIQUE: gigantism

so the other part of the story is that this chapter deals with deliberate exaggeration, and worries about the health of the homeland, referencing inisfail the fair, "the eugenic eucalyptus", tristan and isolde, etc. so it's also partly about irish and broader romantic literature, seeing our internal states mirrored in the outside world — these guys thesis is that that's what connects ulysses to other "novels of everything" (like don quixote), here its a literal "catalogue of styles (as noodle vague says, its all kinda bullshit, every chapter is in assumed voice except i believe the beginning and end internal dialogues of stephen and leo)

the late great, Friday, 28 July 2023 00:50 (eight months ago) link

i bought because prof jon bishop MADE ME*

the late great, Friday, 28 July 2023 00:50 (eight months ago) link

i don't think there's a specific line reference here but i'd need a line # to match it to an annotation because i'm too lazy to reread it right now. i'm too lazy to even grab it. but they do detail every execution listed and every romantic lit reference (and a lot of cyclops stuff from the iliad) so i'm guessing this particular reference is not about the literal health of the land in portugal (also isn't portugal a different type of tree? more like mediterranean cypress / coastal pine type stuff?)

the late great, Friday, 28 July 2023 00:55 (eight months ago) link

"is the land strong enough to support our struggle" / "do its fortunes mirror ours" ... that's the broad tenor of the romantic works referenced

the late great, Friday, 28 July 2023 00:58 (eight months ago) link

like to illustrate the theme: this is the one that ends with blazes boylan bragging about boxing, i think there's a sort of pynchon-esque fantasy about him punching someone (leo?) super hard. some ridiculous physical comedy thing. or maybe it's the idea of bloom punching boylan (cyclops). but there's a similar thing: this local boy / hometown hero, muscular studly and virile (sleeping with bloom's wife) gathering this primal energy and rising up like a force of nature to revenge himself on the foreign invader (i think it's leo?)

the late great, Friday, 28 July 2023 01:05 (eight months ago) link

Both countries underwent serious deforestation in the 18th and 19th centuries. The new independent Irish state started reforestation efforts (around the time of Ulysses's publication), and Portugal was reforested (more successfully) after WWII.

I think this explains it, thanks.

idk enough about irish or portugese politics but from 1834 - 1920ish portugese are having wars of "republicanism" (starts w/ "charterist rebellion" etc)

Haha, interesting to see it smushed up like that, I guess it's true but I'd never thought of this as one continous historical moment. There was a very bloody civil war between absolutist and liberal monarchists between 1832 and 1834, who were supporting different members of the royal family for succession of the throne. After that you the rest of the 19th century goes by under a relatively stable constitutional monarchy, until the country's progressively worse economic position (and failing to stand up to the big dogs in the colonial plunder game) leads to a regicide in 1908 and a republican revolution in 1910. This regime failed to change the nation's fortunes however, and of course then WWI comes in, leading to the 1926 coup that started the process of turning Portugal into the facist regime it remained until 1974. Doesn't strike me as a very good parallel for Ireland's problems, though I guess blood is blood.

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 28 July 2023 09:54 (eight months ago) link

i think there's a sort of pynchon-esque fantasy about him punching someone (leo?) super hard. some ridiculous physical comedy thing. or maybe it's the idea of bloom punching boylan (cyclops). but there's a similar thing: this local boy / hometown hero, muscular studly and virile (sleeping with bloom's wife) gathering this primal energy and rising up like a force of nature to revenge himself on the foreign invader (i think it's leo?)

Yes, it's Bloom, who previously claimed Ireland as his country too. The depictions of anti-semitism in the novel are another thing that I feel like I should read a few essays on before venturing any opinion at all.

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 28 July 2023 09:56 (eight months ago) link

idk if it's interesting. it's just the lack of knowledge about the details of this time and place. i know the basics of the history of france and italy in that century and i know everywhere else it's broadly a similar story

but i didn't mean to try to give you a definitive answer. i was more just describing my experience of "reading ulysses". i know my teacher (who was an adherent of gifford) is just describing one critical view, but i always thought it was interesting one.

bishop called it joyce's "polytropism", and he thought it was the extension of stephen's search for meaning. it wasn't so much about whether one reference or another was more apt, but rather to try to pile on denser and desner layers of reference and analogy and simile to reflect a sort of idea of what modernism and our experience of modern living is like. so the idea (that these guys had) is that it's not about the details or 1:1 correspondences of any particular parallel, but just the compulsive act of doing them over and over again, and broadly organizing chapters in thematic clusters ... in cyclops it's the cyclops, but also the idea of repelling invaders or usurpers by force, and then more generally about tests of strength, and so on. he actually lists several other "categories" for each chapter (like symbol, color, etc) but aside from following the odyssey, the idea of dividing into bodily systems and also rhetorical techniques as organizing principles resonated with me. i guess another example would be that this chapter has millions of plant references, though gifford himself doesn't list "plants" or "trees" as an overriding symbol scheme here (unless i'm missing something, the notation is a bit cryptic)

but yeah, that's just the experience i personally had of "reading ulysses", and the critical framework (one of many no doubt) that i learned, didn't mean to be presciptive

the late great, Friday, 28 July 2023 21:53 (eight months ago) link

i do remember almost having an aneurysm in class because early on another student asked why we had to buy the annotations if understanding the details of any given annotation didn't matter (and i thought fair point because then by induction not knowing the details of any of the references is also okay) and the professor replied "it's like a boooofayyyy, you take what you like"

the late great, Friday, 28 July 2023 22:41 (eight months ago) link

Your head it simply swirls.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Sunday, 30 July 2023 16:06 (eight months ago) link

yeah so that’s calypso, and the dog in proteus (i think ch 3) that runs down the strand toward stephen sort of shimmers like a mirage and changes through many forms.

my term paper ( i’m a science major ok) was an argument that that and other druggy imagery was foreshadowing the thematic structure of the novel (we’re going to try on every set of tropes for explaining our experiences until we find one that restores whatever we lost when we had a crisis of faith / became exiles / entered modernity)

iirc the path stephen takes along the strand (beach?) itself is a sort of “spiral jetty” and the prof said if you filmed the walk as a pov and sped it up it would be as if dublin was spinning around you

great moments in regurgitating back yr professors lectures! i think i have told this story before on ilx, this time i should add that although i got full credit and my paper had good mechanics etc my focus on psychedelic imagery is now personally embarrassing because i was also really into op art and strobe lights and lucid dreaming and reptilians at the time

the late great, Monday, 31 July 2023 01:27 (eight months ago) link

If you can shimmy past the 'ineluctable modality' brain-riff (and you're fine that a major character, pretty much an avatar of J.J. himself, is supposed to be an irritating pseud) then the Oxen of the Sun chapter (14) is the next guardian on the threshold. It'll stamp on your foot and call your mother a drug-dealer. This is the doldrums of the bookmark where most assaults on the text short of the kamikaze end up.

I have arrived here and the first couple of pages were indeed "oy vey" but once I sussed out it's just a medieval style used as a metaphor for some more of the usual drinking and discoursing it got easier, like I've read Dave Sim's Cerebus I know how this works. Think that while a lot of what makes Ulysses obscure now was less so in its time (starting with the Roman mass for instance) some other stuff is probably more accessible now, namedropping commercials, pastiches of different styles. Bloom hasn't said "well that just happened" yet but it's surely only a matter of time.

Nowhere near the end of the chapter though and I might still have plenty of challenges ahead.

Daniel_Rf, Monday, 31 July 2023 10:06 (eight months ago) link

the dog in proteus (i think ch 3) that runs down the strand toward stephen sort of shimmers like a mirage and changes through many forms


As Stephen compulsively transforms it, in a parallel to the scene in Portrait under the table where he uses his hands to rapidly close and open his ... ears I think.

At one point he has it "sniffling like a dog", even.

still not read it. did just see this which puts it slightly higher on my to read list
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fl2jiVzKmTg
outline of the story done for children. It was in the Arts Festival which just ended.
Reminds me of the 70s Paddington though no puppets used just still paper figures

Stevo, Monday, 31 July 2023 10:59 (eight months ago) link

we’re going to try on every set of tropes for explaining our experiences until we find one that restores whatever we lost when we had a crisis of faith / became exiles / entered modernity


I've always read it as not so much do any of these work and more all of these work (because of how mind/language/culture work) and none of them do (because of the contingent and hilarious/tragic nature of the world.)

Basically I see something inherently hopeful in the energy of the book and the demonstration of the inexhaustibility of a single day.

all of these work ... and none of them do


Or if I can be even more tedious, experience rings constantly with endless correspondences / meaningful coincidences, you just can't get stuck on any of them.

yeah exactly!! the home ulysses returns to is not the home he left, even when he clears it of suitors and restores his throne, because the odyssey has changed him etc. there’s also the metaphor of … i believe the boat from the ulysses? like the farmer who’s had the axe for five generations, the handle has been replace three times and the blade twice …

that was the professor’s take anyway, without getting into too much depth the professor’s take was that “what worked” was when leo and stephen glimpse a new possibility for “restoration” when they sort of experience this brief ersatz father / son relationship (leo saving drunk stephen)

even though their crisis is different, the recognize each other as fellow travelers, kindred spirits, because they are both preoccupied with internal exile, that search, and yes love of humanity and love of language

the late great, Monday, 31 July 2023 15:41 (eight months ago) link

sorry the ship of theseus

the late great, Monday, 31 July 2023 15:45 (eight months ago) link

Trigger's broom, like

Stevo, Monday, 31 July 2023 19:50 (eight months ago) link

I'm reading the Odyssey at the moment, and thinking about rereading Ulysses afterwards, to understand how the parts match. I used to just think that Ulysses was taking an archetypal epic and turning it into everyday modern life, but wow, the Odyssey is much weirder than I thought. The Proteus story, for instance, is a weird little tale inside a tale.

Frederik B, Monday, 31 July 2023 20:51 (eight months ago) link

the ending is very different - bloom chooses compassion and empathy, seeing the excitement of the early stages of romance with molly - mirrored in molly’s exciting infidelity with blazes boylan (does she notice his exemplary humanity? idk depends how you interpret the last bit of the last chapter)

odysseus goes john wick

the late great, Monday, 31 July 2023 22:14 (eight months ago) link

frederik the “tale within a tale” thing is what the professor called “novel of everything”

other examples are like divine comedy, decameron, canterbury tales, arabian nights (ayyo pier paolo), don quixote, balzac’s books, moby dick etc

i think the idea is it’s purporting to show “the broad sweep of humanity” through these episodes. idk if that idea has any traction but it’s key (or was in my prof’s mind, rip) to why he chose a story about a spectrum of human folly vs something like oedipus rex, which might be focused on just hubris etc

the late great, Monday, 31 July 2023 22:25 (eight months ago) link

he* being joyce, choosing specifically odyssey over say iliad or antigone

the late great, Monday, 31 July 2023 22:29 (eight months ago) link

so for him it was not just an archetypal epic but a very specific certain sort of one.

we talked a lot for example about about how it (ulysses, don quixote) is sort of like a bildungsroman (another “archetypal epic”) but also not actually a bildungsroman (that was portrait of the artist anyway)

the late great, Monday, 31 July 2023 22:31 (eight months ago) link

Right, and the 'everything' in The Odyssey is a lot weirder then I suspected. The world is still steeped in trauma from the Trojan war - nobody can have a conversation without mentioning someone who died there, it seems - but it's also at the cusp of it becoming history. A new generation, including Telemachos of course, weren't there. They just still live with the aftermath, with Ithaca still being in chaos, and the whole thing begins with news that Orestes has FINALLY slain Aighistos and avenged the murder of Agamemnon. It's like a time of anarchy is closing, but also a time where the heroes saw wonders and magic in strange places - including Menelaos meeting and capturing Proteus.

Frederik B, Tuesday, 1 August 2023 10:35 (eight months ago) link

My standard line has been that these sort of Modernistic 'everything' works - Ulysses, Proust, The Waste Land, The Cantos - are trying to put the world back in order after WWI, but Joyce seems more complex. I read Finnegans Wake last year, and I got the feeling that it was quite significant that it was begun at the time of the Irish Civil War. I'm wondering if it means something, that Joyce is writing Ulysses and FW while Ireland is going through it's birth, which is traumatic, but in extremely complex and evershifting ways as well. He never really makes order, he creates shapeshifting and ever-changing worlds, where order is always fleeting and still fought over.

Frederik B, Tuesday, 1 August 2023 10:39 (eight months ago) link

That is, he seems more postmodern than modern already.

Frederik B, Tuesday, 1 August 2023 10:42 (eight months ago) link

loling at repeated use of "hey, presto" in the bull chapter

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 1 August 2023 11:14 (eight months ago) link

xp to frederick that's getting into the part that they reserved for the follow up class. this was like an upper division "interest check" class for a senior seminar taught by the same guy that you might take if you are considering entering "joyce studies" or "irish lit" ... and so he really focused more on situating it in modernism vs getting in-depth into the cultural history parts (which i believe they did in the follow-up)

i do remember the professors pushed the line that it is not the "birth" of modern ireland, it is the "rebirth" of an irish heritage, in the same way that modern day zionism purports to be a rebirth of the original jewish state (and which, in their own ways, both bloom and stephen walk away from, then spiral back into)

the late great, Tuesday, 1 August 2023 20:15 (eight months ago) link

or, if you prefer, spiral out of, into (yes) a world wider than our (his) experience of modernity

the late great, Tuesday, 1 August 2023 20:16 (eight months ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.