James Joyce Reading Group discussion
Ulysses
>
Ulysses
message 51:
by
Mae
(new)
Jan 28, 2011 02:13AM

reply
|
flag




@ Mae I would love to take a Joyce-themed tour of Dublin!


The performances vary in styles and quality (many done on the fly, with mistakes intact); it is nice though to have it all in one place on my droid phone, to get some Joyce "on the go." They also did Dubliners and The Portrait, which I may also download later.

The performances vary in styles and quality (many done..."
Oh wow. Thanks for pointing that out!
which version of the reading did you get? i mean, who is doing the reading.
i have an LP that has milo o'shea and that actress (can't remember her name, dang!) that was in the film doing monologues from ulysses.
i have a cassette with james joyce reading from several of the works, but it's not great - i think he was much older when he did it, and he doesn't sound in good health - his voice is pretty frail.
i have an LP that has milo o'shea and that actress (can't remember her name, dang!) that was in the film doing monologues from ulysses.
i have a cassette with james joyce reading from several of the works, but it's not great - i think he was much older when he did it, and he doesn't sound in good health - his voice is pretty frail.

Maybe I should mention that I got this from the Audiobooks app via the Google Android Market.
Molly's sololiquoy is a bit hard to really get into...rather than rely on 1 performer, they had like 7 people read, then mixed all of them into one stew of voices, fading them in and out of the central point of hearing for an odd, sometimes disconcerting dreamlike quality. (reminding me of the approach John Cage used in his Roaratorio which incorporated Finnegans Wake and various sounds into a weird sound mix)


That's great Carol. Your group sounds like fun!
Carol wrote: "I am successfully reading Ulysses all the way through with a book group after many attempts to read it solo. I just finished Circe and I am convinced it was meant to be read aloud in a group. A g..."
i staged a few readings of circe - YES! - it's so fun to hear it all read aloud. enjoy your group and the current reading, carol - please feel free to chime in with any thoughts or aHA moments.
i staged a few readings of circe - YES! - it's so fun to hear it all read aloud. enjoy your group and the current reading, carol - please feel free to chime in with any thoughts or aHA moments.
Kinkajou wrote: "Is anyone going to follow #llyses on Twitter on June 16th? Readers from around the world are "rewriting" Ulysses in 140 character tweets. On the 16th they will be posted."
sounds like fun, but i don't twitter.
sounds like fun, but i don't twitter.

Anyhow, I'm still not convinced that Molly's character can be so pinned down. I think Joyce leaves as much room for seeing the Blazes affair as her first adultery, it makes the action of the book dramatic and corresponds to the deliberate lack of definition which he employs with Molly.
Any comments?
i don't think joyce is condemning molly for her affair - at all. i think he illustrates in several passages in the book that men are attracted to her, and i think she's frustrated (obviously) with leopold. that is, until the end of the book. in the final passage, she confirms her love for him and reminds herself of how she fell in love with him originally. sometimes affairs can help people realize what they have at home - and i think molly does that - she repeatedly disses blazes in her monologue in penelope as being brutish. and it is her declaration of love (YES!) for poldy that acts as a kind of divine resolution in the final words.
i think joyce was establishing a sexually liberated woman with molly - she is not trapped by the catholic idea that sex out of wedlock is sinful. she sees it as a natural aspect of humanity. it's clear he was aware of books like madame bovary and anna karenina - and molly's fate is much different than those women.
i think joyce was establishing a sexually liberated woman with molly - she is not trapped by the catholic idea that sex out of wedlock is sinful. she sees it as a natural aspect of humanity. it's clear he was aware of books like madame bovary and anna karenina - and molly's fate is much different than those women.

I don't see how any final decision on whether or not she has had numerous affairs, can be reached. I really don't think it matters but I am interested in how people can assume that all the rumours about her are true. She doesn't compare Bloom physically to anyone but Blazes. I think Joyce is playing with our ideas of knowledge acquisition - of epistemology - and possibly referring to Leibniz who believed, rightly, that rumour was the least favourable method of acquiring real knowledge.
In Exiles, Joyce has the husband stand back while his wife is courted and the reasoning given is that he wants her to develop fully by 'falling' if she wants to. He's setting up an Adam and Eve situation for her. I suppose I see the same thing happening in Ulysses - but, perhaps he's varying it in the novel?

how about doing our own micro synopsis on Ulysses?
Can I propose for episode one
- Telemachus - '
An English man, an Irish man and an artist, wake up in a martello tower'.
- Scylla and Charybdis -
"Artist avoids condescension by sacrificing pet theory."

"Gold and bronze make our two: mermaids who swim through our word music."
- Lestrygonians-
"You are what you eat."
- Oxen of the Sun -
"Ye whole blessed English language gets born, verily everyone else gets very drunk."
- Circe -
"The witching hour. Psychodrama in four parts played on several strumpets. Ruin of all space and time, or maybe just blacked out."
- Penelope -
"Mollys runon thought there is not break or pause or breath or punctuation considers her suitors how it is that Bloom suits her her breasts all perfume yes heart like mad yes yes I will yes."

Excellent. We're 1/3 there.
How about:
Nestor:
Stephen questions Old Wisdom. Given sustenance for rest of day.

"EXTRA EXTRA. READ ALL ABOUT IT. BREEZY SLAPDASH BLOWHARD MADLYDASHING JOURNALISTS. BLOOM HOUSE OF KEYS: KEYS. GET IT?"


Beyond the rocks on Sandymount shore Steven urinates. Art blooms.
Calypso -
The hours rewind. Bloom has kidneys and moving hams in mind. Molly throws 'rocks' at him.

We're half way through the micro synopsis of Ulysses here. It will be interesting to put the 11lysses tweets together with our own. I think the results are going to be wide ranging.

Did Bloom and Stephen unite as father and son? It is not so simple. See Nausicaa for a "happy ending".



I am re-reading Dubliners.
happy bloomsday! i had breakfast in an outdoor cafe this morning and read my favorite passages to a friend from stephen's walk on the beach, calypso, and penelope. so delicious!
i saw on facebook that there is a link to a broadway bloomsday production - it's a 12 hour event and streaming live ... i'll see if i can grab the link and post it here.
i saw on facebook that there is a link to a broadway bloomsday production - it's a 12 hour event and streaming live ... i'll see if i can grab the link and post it here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTEuj4...
The movie of Ulysses from 1967
You can find the other episodes on YouTube
They are all titled
James Joyces Ulysses (1967)_1.avi, James Joyces Ulysses (1967)_2.avi...James Joyces Ulysses (1967)_15.avi (Molly)....
here is the link to the live reading - you might have to have a facebook account to view this ....
http://www.facebook.com/SymphonySpace...
it is streaming as we speak ... or type.
http://www.facebook.com/SymphonySpace...
it is streaming as we speak ... or type.
Ed wrote: "Hey, I saw this a long time ago:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTEuj4...
The movie of Ulysses from 1967"
yes, i've seen it a few times - it's OK, you can get an idea of the storyline from watching it, and the circe chapter tries hard to capture the hallucinogenic aspect of the text. i don't see milo o'shea as bloom, nor do i think the actor playing stephen works - for me. i did like the woman who plays molly. damn, can't remember her name. i think it works as an introduction to the text, but not much more.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTEuj4...
The movie of Ulysses from 1967"
yes, i've seen it a few times - it's OK, you can get an idea of the storyline from watching it, and the circe chapter tries hard to capture the hallucinogenic aspect of the text. i don't see milo o'shea as bloom, nor do i think the actor playing stephen works - for me. i did like the woman who plays molly. damn, can't remember her name. i think it works as an introduction to the text, but not much more.
wandering rocks -
videocamera on lazy susan captures circular coursing of daily dublin damsels and dudes ... watch for falling coins!
videocamera on lazy susan captures circular coursing of daily dublin damsels and dudes ... watch for falling coins!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTEuj4...
The movie of Ulysses from 1967"
yes, i've seen it a few times - it's OK, you can get an idea of the storylin..."
Prob just go straight to Molly. That part is the most memorable.

Ulysses in five minutes: http://infinitezombies.wordpress.com/...
Ulysses in seven hours:
Bloomsday reading at the Rosenbach Museum in Philadelphia
Ulysses in eight months:
Ulysses reading course at the Rosenbach Museum
Ulysses in twenty two years:
http://blog.frankdelaney.com/re-joyce/

Is there anyone in this group ready to read (or re-read) and review it?


Yeah, that sounds pretty achievable for a group.

Shall we check in next Monday having read the story?

I suppose the most interesting thing for me from the academics who have infinite time to learn of these things, would be seeing some of the contemporaneous source material that Joyce was parodying. It's not really necessary to have seen them to enjoy the chapter, but it would be interesting. For example, the Aeolus Chapter (god of winds, breezy, windbag etc.) chapter is obviously a parody of newspaper articles, something that can easily be understood by a reader today, although it would be great fun to see typical excerpts from the turn of the century Irish press. However in the Nausicaa chapter, one filled with gushy domestic idealizing, the women's publications which were being parodied were radically different than they are today, so that seeing examples of these would be really interesting. One of my favorite of his styles is the catechistic Ithaca chapter; I was recently gratified to learn that is was one of Joyce's favorites, as well.


The triply nested parenthetical notes in the Proust parody, match up, by the way. :D



Well, Twilight, it's not great literature. She does portray teen longing and angst well, and she does have imagination.
My hint with Stephanie Meyer, is any time you are stuck in Bella's obsessing over Edward too long, you can start skimming. Not a bad summer read. You can read them at a good clip.
Perhaps I will be a gateway to great literature for teen goth vampire romance fans. :)
i'm happy to comment on a reading of ulysses - i won't be reading it again, but i've read it about 7 or 8 times - some chapters many more times than that - i wrote my graduate thesis on joyce many years ago and have some opinions i would enjoy sharing. just go ahead and post away!
a chapter at a time sounds good - anyone want to comment on the first chapter?
you have a scene at the martello tower with stephen, buck mulligan and haynes (spelling?) an englishman who is visiting the island. right away you have a parallel with the odyssey - here is a modern day ithaca - replete with colonialist (invaders) threatening the stability of our homeland. joyce sets in motion the antagonistic relationship between stephen (the joycean parallel of odysseus' son, telemachus) and buck mulligan, whose stately countenance prepares for a shave and a cup of strong "tay" with mother grogan's milk....
a chapter at a time sounds good - anyone want to comment on the first chapter?
you have a scene at the martello tower with stephen, buck mulligan and haynes (spelling?) an englishman who is visiting the island. right away you have a parallel with the odyssey - here is a modern day ithaca - replete with colonialist (invaders) threatening the stability of our homeland. joyce sets in motion the antagonistic relationship between stephen (the joycean parallel of odysseus' son, telemachus) and buck mulligan, whose stately countenance prepares for a shave and a cup of strong "tay" with mother grogan's milk....