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-   -   James Joyce and Ulysses (http://archives1.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=549997)

Triumph36 11-19-2007 06:55 PM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
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Can anyone here say they've picked up Ulysses, read it, and was like "yeah, I get at least 50% of the literary allusions and know wtf is going on in this book?"

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No. Half the people who say they finished it are lying, the other half don't have a clue what anything means beyond what they are told by others (this includes university professors).

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I haven't read Ulysses, but this type of attitude always strikes me as more elitist than those who claim to understand Ulysses. It's basically saying, "If I don't understand it, no one else possibly can!"

Try Portrait... which I enjoyed a great deal.

microbet 11-19-2007 06:59 PM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
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Lol, try reading this:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...WL._SS500_.jpg

and then gratefully relapse to the pure readability that is Ulysses.

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Don't read it. It's dangerous. Some of my friends in college would read it and make fun of it, but before long they were all babbling idiots.

Spanaway Vin 11-19-2007 07:00 PM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
I'm in the second section of the book and it's gotten a little easier to follow.

I'm kind of thinking about getting the Cliff's Notes for Ulysses, reading a chapter of Ulysses, reading the accompanying chapters in the Notes, ruminating on that for a bit, and then moving on.

Subfallen 11-19-2007 07:31 PM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
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Don't read it. It's dangerous. Some of my friends in college would read it and make fun of it, but before long they were all babbling idiots.

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Too late, I already have. Except I started as a babbling idiot and ended a drooling one.

gumpzilla 11-19-2007 07:43 PM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
I didn't particularly enjoy Portrait, so I've never bothered moving on to the heavy stuff.

EDIT:

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I haven't read Ulysses, but this type of attitude always strikes me as more elitist than those who claim to understand Ulysses. It's basically saying, "If I don't understand it, no one else possibly can!"

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While there's something to this, a Sklanskyesque Bayesian approach tends to lead me to think that the balance of pretentiousness tips the conventional way.

gusmahler 11-19-2007 09:30 PM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
The book is in the public domain. Full HTML version is at http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext03/ulyss11h.htm

WhoIam 11-20-2007 01:44 AM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
You don't need to understand every single reference and subtle allusion to enjoy Ulysses, but there are plenty of books explaining these if you're interested. If a section gives you trouble, try smoking some pot and re-reading it.

Triumph36 11-20-2007 01:46 AM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
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I haven't read Ulysses, but this type of attitude always strikes me as more elitist than those who claim to understand Ulysses. It's basically saying, "If I don't understand it, no one else possibly can!"

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While there's something to this, a Sklanskyesque Bayesian approach tends to lead me to think that the balance of pretentiousness tips the conventional way.

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well, like poring over Joyce, I read this sentence 3 times and it makes no sense. I mean, I think you're saying that people who read and understand Ulysses are more pretentious and elitist.

KilgoreTrout 11-20-2007 10:18 AM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
"Mr. Leopold Bloom consumed with relish the inner organs of beasts and fowl."

I read Ulysses in college. Without the guide and guidance of a prof, I would have missed much of the allusions. It's more of a virtuoso work than a readable one, IMO. The stories in Dubliners are more accessible and contain many of the elements hidden in Ulysses. Dubliners + portrait is enough Joyce for me.

Skip Sein und Zeit. L'Etre et le Neant is an easier read. Then plow through Warheit und Methode for a gentle brain [censored].

Peter Harris 11-20-2007 01:26 PM

Re: James Joyce and Ulysses
 
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So what, I'm pretty sure James Joyce doesn't have 30,000+ posts. Ulysses by a mile.

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*whoosh* over the heads of the newbie OOTiots.

This needs more love.


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