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Featured Book Review: Dubliners by James Joyce


By Dan Schneider Apr 30, 2008, 10:54 GMT

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DanMay 5th, 2008 - 18:45:26

You have some glaring factual errors in your piece. Joyce was married once and in the Brenda Maddox biography of his wife Nora there is no mention of her admitting he died because of going blind. According to the Richard Ellman biography of Joyce he died soon after he had surgery for a perforated ulcer. Perhaps your professor hung to his tale not because he inspected Joyce's genitalia but the facts he read from well-documented sources, a practice you should learn from your old proctor.

Your claim of the 'fact that no two scholars have ever remotely come close to agreeing on the [Finnigans Wake's] aim, intent, and meaning in more than vague assertions and oblique claims' reveals more own sciolistic habit for transmuting assumptions into fact. A cursory reading of some of the major critiques of Finnigans Wake will show there is little debate over the work's aim, intent and meaning.

And finally, if Joyce didn't have anything particularly new to say, what's the point of re-reading him at all, let alone publishing a feature on him?

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Missing the pointMay 10th, 2008 - 12:52:04

'A cursory reading of some of the major critiques of Finnigans Wake will show there is little debate over the work's aim, intent and meaning.'

That is exactly the point--because there is nothing to successfully debate over. Also, the reviewer was not saying that Joyce died from blindness, but syphilis.

'And finally, if Joyce didn't have anything particularly new to say, what's the point of re-reading him at all, let alone publishing a feature on him?'

Answer:

'But, he said it, at his best, better than most. It is the fact that Joyce attempts more than contemporary short fictionists, and that this collection is not a mere collection, but a narrative movement, or symphony, with a purpose, that makes the book glow all the more brightly in contrast to the dreck that populates today’s fiction.'

So it is not a wonder why no one has been able to 'show there is little debate over the work's aim, intent and meaning' in FW if such distortions are read in a mere review.

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DanMay 12th, 2008 - 19:05:47

Joyce's wife (nor his biographers) never admitted Joyce died from syphilis.

If, 'A cursory reading of some of the major critiques of Finnigans Wake will show there is little debate over the work's aim, intent and meaning.' is exactly the point, then why did the reviewer say, '...no two scholars have ever remotely come close to agreeing on the [Finnigans Wake's] aim, intent, and meaning in more than vague assertions and oblique claims.'?

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AlexMay 27th, 2008 - 14:08:36

This is a good review, although it seems a little careless at times. The reviewer for example didn't pay careful attention to Two Gallants. It is clearly stated that the girl is a servant. She is prompted by her Corley to steal the golden coin from the family she works for. Morally, she is not too far from a prostitute and he is not too far from a pimp, but this is not her actual trade

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VJun 3rd, 2008 - 12:34:29

I think that your comment about Two Gallants is too harsh. YOUdid not pay any attention to the wonderfully developed character of Lenehan, who is completely lost without his sly friend, but also starts thinking about normal life and having family...

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Dubliners (Dover Thrift Editions)

Declared by their author to be a chapter in the moral history of Ireland, this collection of 15 tales offers vivid, tightly focused observations of the lives of Dublin's poorer ...more

  • US Release: 2008-04-29
  • UK Release:

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