This novel is renowned for difficulty of reading. I admit that were it not for a lecture series I rented from the library taught by James Hefferman, a Dartmouth professor, and heavily relying on the internet for research, I would not understand any of this book. It is not uncommon for me to spend an hour reading a single page. Joyce references figures from 18th and 19th century Irish and British history, renaissance scholars, Shakespeare, obscure saints seemingly from the beginning of history, and on and on. On top of this excessive erudition are the "stream of consciousness" passages in which we are allowed to read a characters every thought verbatim. When I read Ulysses, I do not feel so much like I'm reading, rather I feel like I am deciphering a code. You don't read Ulysses like a Hemmingway or Fitzgerald, rather you study it like the Bible--passage by passage. You unlock its secrets.
My plan is to write about my adventure of reading Ulysses. I got this idea from a writer friend of mine named Julie. It seems to be all the rage now, for example blogging about following a French cookbook is now a movie. It was a good idea there, why not here? In the end it is all about a journey.
dude, that sounds like a journey! in my current english class at sierra I read one of Joyce's short stories and my professor explained to me that this was by far his easiest read. She then challenged the class to read one of his books; she said it would be one hell of an accomplishment. Not that I took much creedence until i randomly decided to read your blog. That book must have been Ulysses
ReplyDeleteword joseph!!! you literate bastard :)
ReplyDeleteupdate your blog!