Front cover image for The illicit Joyce of postmodernism : reading against the grain

The illicit Joyce of postmodernism : reading against the grain

For nearly three quarters of a century, the modernist way of reading has been the only way of reading Joyce - useful, yes, and powerful but, like all frameworks, limited. This book takes a leap across those limits into postmodernism, where the pleasures and possibilities of an unsuspected Joyce are yet to be found. Kevin J.H. Dettmar begins by articulating a stylistics of postmodernism drawn from the key texts of Roland Barthes, Mikhail Bakhtin, and Jean-Francois Lyotard. Read within this framework, Dubliners emerges from behind its modernist facade as the earliest product of Joyce's proto-post-modernist sensibility. Dettmar exposes these stories as tales of mystery, not mastery, despite the modernist earmarks of plentiful symbols, allusions, and epiphanies. Ulysses, too, has been inadequately served by modernist critics. Where they have emphasized the work's ingenious Homeric structure, Dettmar focuses instead upon its seams, those points at which the narrative willfully, joyfully overflows its self-imposed bounds. Finally, he reads A Portrait of the Artist and Finnegans Wake as less playful, less daring texts - the first constrained by the precious, would be poet at its center, the last marking a surprising retreat from the constantly evolving, vertiginous experience of Ulysses
Print Book, English, ©1996
University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, Wis., ©1996
Criticism, interpretation, etc
xv, 276 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
9780299150600, 9780299150648, 0299150607, 029915064X
34246198
The illicit Joyce of postmodernism
Theorizing postmodern stylistics
From interpretation to "intrepidation": "the sisters"
The "Dubliners" epiphony: (mis)reading the book of ourselves
Dedalus, dead alas! dead at last
Toward a nonmodernist "Ulysses"
JJ and the carnivalesque imagination