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Thread: Man this book is hard!

  1. #46
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    Ah you are correct ere they come now, trooping on with the verdict. Guilty! Guilty! Guilty! That's him condemned then to be endlessly analysed in academia. Along the lines of What does he mean? And Ain't he clever? With old JJ more meant less. Once as a youngster (Ever sooo long ago when I was even younger than I am now) I was reading Ulysses when over my shoulder came the voice of Mr Fleck my History teacher "What are you doing reading that pornographic tome boy!" I was surprised to discover that the incomprehensible prolixity before me was pornography. Needless to say I was determined to find, that very evening, the dirty bits and I did. But they were merely grubby. Which is what Joyce himself was - grubby. Clever talented but very grubby. If he had just written "Dubliners" , "Stephen Hero" and "Portrait of The Artist..." I'd probably agree with that jury but someone told the sod he could write and he went and believed it!

  2. #47
    Registered User FenwickS's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ennison View Post
    Ah you are correct ere they come now, trooping on with the verdict. Guilty! Guilty! Guilty! That's him condemned then to be endlessly analysed in academia. Along the lines of What does he mean? And Ain't he clever? With old JJ more meant less. Once as a youngster (Ever sooo long ago when I was even younger than I am now) I was reading Ulysses when over my shoulder came the voice of Mr Fleck my History teacher "What are you doing reading that pornographic tome boy!" I was surprised to discover that the incomprehensible prolixity before me was pornography. Needless to say I was determined to find, that very evening, the dirty bits and I did. But they were merely grubby. Which is what Joyce himself was - grubby. Clever talented but very grubby. If he had just written "Dubliners" , "Stephen Hero" and "Portrait of The Artist..." I'd probably agree with that jury but someone told the sod he could write and he went and believed it!
    Extremely well put.

    As luck has it my first Joyce attempt has drained all my mental capacities, and I do not think that I'll return to Joyce's other works for a long, long time. A shame for I understand his others might be more enjoyable (and legible) to me.

    For me, like high school you, it took a while to understand how naughty (or in your words which I shall borrow, grubby) this book is, but being it such a challenge, I quite enjoy that aspect of it.

    You must err in order to grow! Different strokes for different folks! and so on and so forth!
    "Without art, the crudeness of reality would make the world unbearable."- George Bernard Shaw

  3. #48
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    Quote Originally Posted by manuscript View Post
    i agree very much with what you wrote about explanations being excessive or omitted. i began with a great deal of faith in the annotations and became increasingly frustrated and annoyed, it was only in the last few chapters that i gave up on them.
    Why did you use the annotations in the first place? I used them because I was annoyed and frustrated by the book itself... mainly because of not understanding much of anything. But, like you, I was annoyed and frustrated by the annotations that left me annoyed and frustrated whatever I did. So why read it? Maybe it requires faith, faith in the "God of Modernism". But I don't have that, and I don't see how to get it, and have no desire to get it...

    it was as though the editor had been driven mad by the text to the point of becoming completely detached from the reality of its relationship to a genuine audience. i am sorry to hear it about oxford world classics as i have been going through a love relationship with those editions, but i guess it was only a matter of time.
    Yes! And the Oxford felt exactly the same, and the print size was awful, plus I was very doubtful about the edition they used... (a whole other barrel of worms...) I'm not that impressed by Oxford World Classics, like Penguin they are over-priced given the inferior paper quality... British publishers don't use acid free paper... I'd always go for an American publisher, Everyman hardback, or Wordsworth before considering Oxford or Penguin. I did get the Oxford Dr Johnson because it seemed comprehensive, but they'd left out a lot of the good stuff and filled the first couple of hundred pages with tedious juvenalia. So I'm incredibly careful about buying Oxford...

  4. #49
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    Quote Originally Posted by mal4mac View Post
    Why did you use the annotations in the first place? I used them because I was annoyed and frustrated by the book itself... mainly because of not understanding much of anything. But, like you, I was annoyed and frustrated by the annotations that left me annoyed and frustrated whatever I did. So why read it? Maybe it requires faith, faith in the "God of Modernism". But I don't have that, and I don't see how to get it, and have no desire to get it...
    yes, i too used them because i found it very difficult to understand what was happening in the book on a basic level, but also i think because i knew i would not know what to look for in terms of more abstract themes otherwise, i needed signposts. i find the way you describe the cycle of frustration quite accurate. sometimes the annotations were useful and so i tried to focus on those that were. but yeah, when i did not find them useful i regularly found myself flinging the book across the room in all helpless rage. even unable to take it up again for sometimes up to a week.

    i read it because i had to know what it would mean to read it or what reading it could give me. i have sometimes done the most stupid and unnecessary extreme things in my life just because i had to know what those experiences would mean. whether insecurity or curiosity drives my addiction to getting knowledge or something else i am not sure. (i am sure that much of the knowledge i have gotten is ridiculous or useless.) but at least in the case of Ulysses i think it was worth it for me.

    Yes! And the Oxford felt exactly the same, and the print size was awful, plus I was very doubtful about the edition they used... (a whole other barrel of worms...) I'm not that impressed by Oxford World Classics, like Penguin they are over-priced given the inferior paper quality... British publishers don't use acid free paper... I'd always go for an American publisher, Everyman hardback, or Wordsworth before considering Oxford or Penguin. I did get the Oxford Dr Johnson because it seemed comprehensive, but they'd left out a lot of the good stuff and filled the first couple of hundred pages with tedious juvenalia. So I'm incredibly careful about buying Oxford...
    hahaha. what you write makes me realise how much my preferences have been based on irrational prejudices deriving from product branding.

    sorry i did not respond earlier but i had not seen your message. i actually came back to this thread just now (glad i did) to write something further specific i had been thinking about the penguin edition. that it described Molly's chapter as existing in order to complete all of the perspectives on Bloom. even at the time that sounded silly to me because i found the final chapter so especially brilliant and interesting, almost magical after the rest of the book in the way it dealt with reality. then i read something today somewhere else about the concern Ulysses as a novel has with transposition or flow of knowledge across people and i realised why it seemed so silly to me. the editor seems obsessed with the idea of Bloom as a center of knowledge, to the point of subsuming other characters entirely to this quest for knowledge about Bloom, rather than reading them as something more interesting, such as figures in a narrative progression concerned with thought itself. why not see Molly's final word as being the final word on the ideas developed through the book, rather than just the final word on Bloom, when ideas rather than personality seem so obviously to be the book's concern? (i hope this doesnt sound too crazed, i just felt the need to write about it.)

  5. #50
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    Manuscript, I'll try to offer a short explanation as to why, for one reading of the novel, it is important to consider Molly as an extension of Bloom. Much of Ulysses is about personal consciousness, and Joyce realized, much as Carl Jung did, that part of understanding one's conscience is understanding the part of it that is buried or sub-conscious. One of Joyce's main goals was to create a "whole character"; he felt, to a certain degree, that the only whole character in literature was Hamlet. The result, of course, is that Bloom cannot be fully understood without both Stephen and Molly; likewise, he cannot fully understand himself without considering his relationships with every other character with whom he interacts. This is one of the motifs that creates the transition to Finnegans Wake. HCE (Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker or "Here Comes Everyone") is, in many ways, the next step in Joyce's analysis of the individual and his/her place in the totality of human existence. Another way to look at the subject is to consider "metempsychosis," the concept that Bloom and Molly discuss repeatedly in Ulysses. On the surface level, it is synonymous with reincarnation, but Joyce takes it further and explores different levels of the "transmigration of the soul." Understanding of different individuals allows his characters to "absorb" parts of them or "transfer" parts of themselves (ideas, feelings, consciousnesses, concepts, facts, histories, ambitions, understandings, etc) into others. This is essentially what happens as we experience new people, places, and beliefs; we learn. But, what Joyce is questioning is how we consciously utilize those interactions. How a character like Bloom changes and grows with each interaction is one of the major themes of the book. Likewise, there are many aspects of Joyce in both Stephen and Bloom. In short, Bloom could theoretically not exist unless Stephen had existed because he is, in many ways, a later version of Bloom, just as Stephen is an earlier version... that Stephen/Bloom combination still, however, room to progress, grow, and evolve. HCE (Finnegan's Wake) could technically not exist without the previous Stephen > Bloom > Molly process...

  6. #51
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    Just reread my post, and I hope the "I'll try to offer a short explanation" part didn't sound snooty and condescending. I really did just mean that I hoped I would be able to provide a short, coherent explanation. Ha ha ha.

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    What do you mean by "cultural difference"? where are you from? A book like this has to be studied not read like we would normally read a book. I began reading it as if I were studying it for a degree course, making notes etc research.

  8. #53
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    Quote Originally Posted by vaarl69 View Post
    What do you mean by "cultural difference"? where are you from? A book like this has to be studied not read like we would normally read a book. I began reading it as if I were studying it for a degree course, making notes etc research.
    You make it sound just like a sacred scripture. Maybe Joyce intended it that way, but he sure as hell didn't write it to only studied academically.
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    The more I read, the more I shall covet to read. Robert Burton The Anatomy of Melancholy Partion3, Section 1, Member 1, Subsection 1

  9. #54
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    Ulysses is one of my favorite books, but not because I understand it. I just delight in the writing, the festival of words. There are plenty of resources to guide you through following his model (The Odyssey).
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