View Full Version : Gave up on Ulysses
Mutatis-Mutandis
03-19-2009, 05:56 PM
Well, I started Ulysses, and it was just too much for me. I have been reading canonical works lately, as I am studying to be an English high school teacher, so I am familiarizing myself with works I never read. Since Modern Library ranked Ulysses first on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century, I figured I would read the best.
I even came here to get some advice, which I took some. I would read the summaries and analysis on Sparknotes. Barely in depth, but good enough to make me at least understand what was happening. So, I was reading when I realized I was torturing myself, so I quit.
Do you think Joyce wrote this with the main goal of screwing with lit professors' minds? Because, it seems that way to me. He even said something like, "this book has enough puzzles in it to keep scholars busy for centuries." He couldn't have had the goal of creating it for entertainment purposes, or even "art for the sake of art," as it must have been a helluva job to write. My theory is this at least partly the case, and it seems kind of sadistic, don't you think? I also read a quote about Finnegan's Wake from Joyce that was something like, "It took me a lifetime to write it, it should take you a lifetime to read it." Ego, anyone?
I'll probably read it eventually (an annotated version), but there is too much other stuff to read.
EDIT: Could a mod change the title? I didn't know if the italics would work, and it obviously didn't.
mayneverhave
03-19-2009, 06:18 PM
Do you think Joyce wrote this with the main goal of screwing with lit professors' minds? Because, it seems that way to me. He even said something like, "this book has enough puzzles in it to keep scholars busy for centuries." He couldn't have had the goal of creating it for entertainment purposes, or even "art for the sake of art," as it must have been a helluva job to write. My theory is this at least partly the case, and it seems kind of sadistic, don't you think? I also read a quote about Finnegan's Wake from Joyce that was something like, "It took me a lifetime to write it, it should take you a lifetime to read it." Ego, anyone?
I do not think he wrote it just to screw it with people. Ulysses is a work of art of the highest calibre, and Joyce had definite artistic goals in the construction of all his novels - each work (if you trace it from Dubliners, through The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, to Ulysses, and then to Finnegans Wake) builds upon the previous as Joyce's prose style grows more and more experimental and his topic more expansive and epic.
There have been many threads and discussions on what one should do for assistance on reading Ulysses - and this includes quite a few books that have been suggested and that I've suggested myself. The novel's reputation for difficulty is well documented, and thus there exist quite a few guides to help one through the novel for the first time.
My best piece of advice is to just persevere. If there is a passage that is confusing (and this is especially common in Oxen of the Sun) simply keep reading it, just make it through and go back later. Try to enjoy his vibrant and full language and go along with his linguistic experiments. Ulysses is ultimately a fun, comedic novel whose subject matter includes the association of art and defecating, farting in public, and Irish politics (perhaps all of these are related).
Enjoy, and don't give up.
Emil Miller
03-19-2009, 08:21 PM
Well, I started Ulysses, and it was just too much for me. I have been reading canonical works lately, as I am studying to be an English high school teacher, so I am familiarizing myself with works I never read. Since Modern Library ranked Ulysses first on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century, I figured I would read the best.
I even came here to get some advice, which I took some. I would read the summaries and analysis on Sparknotes. Barely in depth, but good enough to make me at least understand what was happening. So, I was reading when I realized I was torturing myself, so I quit.
Do you think Joyce wrote this with the main goal of screwing with lit professors' minds? Because, it seems that way to me. He even said something like, "this book has enough puzzles in it to keep scholars busy for centuries." He couldn't have had the goal of creating it for entertainment purposes, or even "art for the sake of art," as it must have been a helluva job to write. My theory is this at least partly the case, and it seems kind of sadistic, don't you think? I also read a quote about Finnegan's Wake from Joyce that was something like, "It took me a lifetime to write it, it should take you a lifetime to read it." Ego, anyone?
I'll probably read it eventually (an annotated version), but there is too much other stuff to read.
EDIT: Could a mod change the title? I didn't know if the italics would work, and it obviously didn't.
If you are planning on becoming an English high school teacher, why concern yourself with the obscurantism of Joyce when, as you have pointed out, there is so much else to read ? If you find that you are torturing yourself by reading a particular writer, why prolong the agony? I have only read Joyce in extracts on this forum and, to be frank, I find him virtually unreadable. A more tedious stream of ( consciousness ) nonsense would be hard to find. I don't care how many critics proclaim Joyce's writings, you can throw them in the trash can as far as I am concerned, even though they may have a literary merit that appeals to the, all to often soi-disant, intelligentsia.
The Comedian
03-19-2009, 09:18 PM
I'm with Brian Bean on this one -- I don't see any reason why you need to read Ulysses. Put the book down and read something else. It won't go anywhere, and you can come back to it later, if you want.
Emmy Castrol
03-19-2009, 10:37 PM
I am reading Ulysses at the moment too and I've discovered that if you read it one sentence at time, it's quite enjoyable. So for now, I'm reading it for the language and not yet the story (hopefully that will come about after my second and third rereads).
Mutatis-Mutandis
03-20-2009, 01:28 AM
If you are planning on becoming an English high school teacher, why concern yourself with the obscurantism of Joyce when, as you have pointed out, there is so much else to read ? If you find that you are torturing yourself by reading a particular writer, why prolong the agony? I have only read Joyce in extracts on this forum and, to be frank, I find him virtually unreadable. A more tedious stream of ( consciousness ) nonsense would be hard to find. I don't care how many critics proclaim Joyce's writings, you can throw them in the trash can as far as I am concerned, even though they may have a literary merit that appeals to the, all to often soi-disant, intelligentsia.
I came up with answers to all your questions, which is why I quit reading it. Like I said, it was at number 1 on the list I mentioned, so I figured I would try it. As far as I am concerned, it does not deserve the number one spot. On the list, sure, maybe even the top 10. But give the number one slot to something at least potentially enjoyable.
I asked one of my English professors (someone extremely intelligent, especially when it comes to lit/writing) some questions about Ulysses, and when I told him I quit, he basically thought it was a good idea, again, because there is so much other stuff to read.
Emmy Castrol
03-20-2009, 01:50 AM
Just because you are reading Ulysses and it is a bit of a challenge does not mean you have to drop reading everything else to do it. Yes, I am trying to get through Ulysses but I also read about 5-10 other books each week so I don't see why you can't do the same. Unless you've already made up your mind to drop it...?
Mutatis-Mutandis
03-20-2009, 08:51 AM
Well, first, I only read one book at a time. Second, I do other things than read. . . 5-10 books a week is not something I do. I usually just read before I go to bed, maybe a little during the day.
Adnd I think "a bit of a challeneg," is an understatement. . .
Scheherazade
03-20-2009, 09:05 AM
This is one of the books I have managed to postpone till today and all this talk does not make me want to read it anytime sooner!
:D
I was defeated three times over a period of about fifteen years before I eventually finished it. I can't say it's now my favourite book, but something got through and I'm not ruling out the possibility that it may eventually be my favourite book. More and more it seems to me that the books I've had to work hardest with and that have most frustrated me are the ones I end up caring about the most. Maybe it's because, more than just telling you about someone else's experiences, they give you an experience of your own. I don't know. I feel similar about Auto da Fe by Elias Canetti, Rouse Up, Rouse Up, O Young Men of the New Age by Kenzaburo Oe, Moby Dick, which I just finished and Blood and Guts in Highschool by Kathy Acker, which really is pretty much my favourite ever book.
Riesa
03-20-2009, 12:42 PM
http://www.theonion.com/content/atlas/
go to Ireland and click on the upper right, "historical highlight 1922"
Lokasenna
03-20-2009, 01:32 PM
I've tried to read it three times now, and always give up less than 70 pages in. I just loose the will to live - I love literature, but genuinely detest Joyce.
At the end of the day, though, its all about personal preference. I'm sure there are plenty of scholars who have interesting things to say about the text (and there are interesting things - it is by no means unworthy of study) who would turn their noses up at things I like. If you don't like it, then don't worry about it and go and find something you enjoy!:)
mkh1958
03-26-2009, 10:34 AM
Can I offer you some advice? It's worth reading. Did Joyce write it to screw with English Lit Professors? A little, but that's the Irishman in him. Please take a look at my article - ehow.com/how_4833294_read-james-joyces-ulysses.html How to Read James Joyce's Ulysses. I promise it will help you.
Smooth Operator
04-29-2009, 08:18 PM
You should really read A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man first, but in my opinion, unless you are a specialist, you need a study guide to truly enjoy Ulysses. But I wouldn't denounce Joyce like others are doing, in fact i think that with Joyce, Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Emily Dickinson, you have all the literature you will ever need.
Dick Shane
05-05-2009, 04:38 PM
Interesting little fact about the title, first word and last word (partly noticed by Richard Ellmann):
ULYSSES
Stately...
...Yes.
Tsuyoiko
05-12-2009, 08:19 AM
I'm also struggling with Ulysses. I'm avoiding study guides for the moment, because I want to at least try to understand it for myself. I got through Telemachus and Nestor not too badly, although I had to Google several words and phrases. Proteus is much harder. Since I'm reading it online here, I'm copying any particularly difficult paragraphs into notepad, looking up everything I don't understand, and "translating" the paragraph until I can read it in a way that makes some kind of sense to me.
Bloomsday
05-12-2009, 10:11 PM
You should really read A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man first, but in my opinion, unless you are a specialist, you need a study guide to truly enjoy Ulysses. .
That's simply not true. I think the most important thing to enjoy Ulysses is to understand that you don't need to know what every sentence means, and most importantly that you have an understanding of what was going on in Ireland at the time. Being Irish, I had a very good knowledge of the background story so that helped a lot.
Tsuyoiko
05-14-2009, 06:14 AM
That's simply not true. I think the most important thing to enjoy Ulysses is to understand that you don't need to know what every sentence means, and most importantly that you have an understanding of what was going on in Ireland at the time. Being Irish, I had a very good knowledge of the background story so that helped a lot.
I think you're both right. As with any complicated novel, if you're going to stick at it, there has to be something to hold your interest, something you can relate to. For you, that's your knowledge of Ireland. I don't know the first thing about Ireland, but I'm still getting something out of this book. The thing that's holding me is the cleverness of it and the way Joyce shows his vast knowledge of literature, art, music, religion, everything really. But to appreciate that I need to look stuff up. I tried to do that myself at first, but I have to admit I've resorted to a study guide now.
prendrelemick
05-27-2009, 02:55 AM
My advice would be to just read it. Read it for the words, don't worry about deeper meanings, or the connections with Homer, or with Irish history, or anything else. Just read it as a book. It is a fine enough piece of work to stand alone.
My suggestion, is, that if you don't like it, don't read it. As for that list - it isn't a particularly good one - highly limited, and typically American - but one is better off reading other works before Ulysses. Ulysses is what one turns to when they have sapped the 19th century's works to their fullest, and needs something that tears up the standard structure. It's more of a liberation than anything else - the progression toward a style that enables both the past and the individual artist to function together. He tested it out in his earlier works, but Ulysses essentially works to recraft everything, and push the limits of what is possible. Finnegans Wake goes even further, though loses something, and is less interesting in plot and content most people find (and incomprehensible, though it is great fun to cut up).
If Ulysses isn't working, my advice is to come back to it, or to not read it. There is no real "trick" to the text, and one generally needs to know everything about its structure to understand what it is saying (that includes understanding the very, very thick layers of interext). It's a lot of work, and really only something people who are bored with standard narrative would feel interested in as a hobby, rather than as an attempt to educate themselves, or to brag to people who for the most part don't care.
ergill_sanchez
06-11-2009, 10:08 PM
Do you think Joyce wrote this with the main goal of screwing with lit professors' minds? Because, it seems that way to me. He even said something like, "this book has enough puzzles in it to keep scholars busy for centuries." He couldn't have had the goal of creating it for entertainment purposes, or even "art for the sake of art," as it must have been a helluva job to write. My theory is this at least partly the case, and it seems kind of sadistic, don't you think? I also read a quote about Finnegan's Wake from Joyce that was something like, "It took me a lifetime to write it, it should take you a lifetime to read it." Ego, anyone?
I'm pretty sure the "busy for centuries" quote was in reference to Finnegans Wake actually, which one can imagine Joyce writing to put complaints of difficulty in Ulysses violently to rest. But cheeky accusations aside, no - I wouldn't think he simply wrote either of these to screw with professors. "Screwing" is a kind of clumsy word for it. He likes density and difficulty, and he likes laying various jokes on and for the reader, but all the effort he put into them wasn't in the service of empty frustration and mockery. Even during Ulysses, Joyce's eyesight was on the wane, and in a particularly painful and tedious kind of way, surgery after surgery after surgery - as he well knew, his writing aggravated the problem. And that's not even mentioning all the time and energy, itself, that he expended in its composition. It wasn't a trivial thing to him. Absolutely the man had an ego, but artists with big egos aren't anything to write home about. You should also bear in mind, though, that the quotations you give, and that people frequently cite when discussing these books, were partly stated tongue-in-cheek. Like the books themselves, there's as much self-deprecation as there is seriousness in them.
But in the end, it's not like they're for everyone, and there's no such thing as a book for everyone anyway. By dint of difficulty, Joyce's late work cuts down readers even further, but what can one say outside of que sirrah? Some books are difficult, some easy; some popular, some not. It's nice to have a plurality of literature out there, to have the choice in the matter whether to take it easy or go in for the long and labored haul. There's plenty of substantive reading from either route. Even better, since there's so much stuff out there, so much and so many kinds of great literature, too much even for any one person to read, there's no point in getting hung up on the consumption of each and every one of them. You just can't get into Ulysses? Ah well, on to something else. This doesn't have to mean that not caring for it makes you a lesser person, or it a lesser book, or your failure to read it a terrifying loss. It just did't pan out for you. Maybe it might someday, maybe not. Maybe you might find more to like in Joyce's comparatively simpler stuff, Dubliners or Portrait. Just do what readers do and give it a go. Not working? Move on.
I managed may way through Ulysses over several years, mainly reading it on the holidays, and typically reading other stuff in between. I'd go through a chapter, say, and then read bits from the Bloomsday Book and/or ReJoyce to pick up stuff I might've missed. I took a somewhat similar course with the Wake recently, but in a much quicker time-frame. Well aware of the difficulties and discouraged by the tedium of starting out with an archaelogical reading style, I decided to tear through it on the first go, damn it all to hell, and put the anxieties of an initial reading to rest. Of course, I like modernism and I'm like Joyce pretty well too, so there you go. It varies for everyone.
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