Of course, but unless you want to take heavy gunfire it's best to don the necessary camouflage before enteringAvatar wrote:Pffft, the 'Tank is not exactly immune to or reticent about bias.

u.
Moderator: Fist and Faith
Of course, but unless you want to take heavy gunfire it's best to don the necessary camouflage before enteringAvatar wrote:Pffft, the 'Tank is not exactly immune to or reticent about bias.
It's odd...I don't know that my understanding of Joyce is necessarily the most profound, but what I have read of him (Portrait and some of Dubliners) I don't understand why people seem to single him out as one of the authors who's so complex as to be worthless.There seems to be a difference between modernity and modernism, then. I say this because I absolutely refuse to place the works of James Joyce in the same group as Keeping Up with the Kardashians. Refuse to! Though I agree that such drivel is even beneath post-modernism.
In a good/bad sense, I think it's in question whether good is good in many circumstances, and in the sense of a morals as a personal code (you know, "the moral of the story is"), not for living a kind/just life, but a life that fits and is consistent, I think Martin actually has frequently been emphasizing their importance.while the last frames morality in circumstantial frames.
Because of Finnegan's Wake.Holsety wrote:I don't understand why people seem to single him out as one of the authors who's so complex as to be worthless.
Also remember: normies are stupidAvatar wrote:Because of Finnegan's Wake.Holsety wrote:I don't understand why people seem to single him out as one of the authors who's so complex as to be worthless.
About which he apparently said people would argue for a thousand years.
Also, I believe that the number of books analysing Ulysses is far greater than the total number of books every written by Joyce.
--A
You make it sound like that's a bad thingaliantha wrote:I managed to get through Ulysses. You're right, Orlion, a lot of it is technique for the sake of technique.
Haven't read Finnegan's Wake -- should I give it a go?
That's it, then. When I finally get to Ireland, I'll have to shanghai some guy in a Dublin pub to read Finnegan's Wake aloud to me. Oooh, now there's a great pickup line!ussusimiel wrote:My advice to anyone trying to read the book without outside aid, read it aloud so that you get the puns and in an Irish accent (preferably a Dublin one).
You still won't get them.ussusimiel wrote:My advice to anyone trying to read the book without outside aid, read it aloud so that you get the puns and in an Irish accent (preferably a Dublin one).
No! I've kept it darkAvatar wrote:ussusimiel wrote:Say Ussusimiel...have you ever told us what it is that you do?
Heh. Forgot about that. I've started the book today, so we'll see when that thread comes out (probably soon).ussusimiel wrote: P.S. Say Orlion, are you ready for that Ulysses dissection thread yet?
Thought that. More teacherish, but in a good wayAvatar wrote:Hahaha, I thought that post sounded a bit professorish, hence my question.ussusimiel wrote: Nothing too exciting. I suppose a teacher might be the best description...
Hi guy's. Ali - this reminds me of the time I was drunk in Dublin on a Friday night and sitting on a park bench in a break between an enless crawl of loud smokey bars. A down and out guy sat on the other end of the bench asked me what the book in my pocket was and I replied 'Down and out in London and Paris'. We had a vigorous discussion on the merits or otherwise of the book and then went our separate ways. It could only happen in Dublin where even the bums are well read!aliantha wrote:That's it, then. When I finally get to Ireland, I'll have to shanghai some guy in a Dublin pub to read Finnegan's Wake aloud to me.
And thank the gods for that!u. wrote:we are finally become the literary forum that fulfils all our pretentions