Earn Joyces Rare View: The Nature Of Things In Finnegans Wake Published By Richard Beckman Format Kindle
Beckman argues that readers of Finnegans Wake must develop a new method of reading that flows from the text itself.
Focusing on the mode of perception in the Wakeseeing the world obliquely because that is often the only way to get at the nature of thingsBeckman maintains that Joyces satire depends on looking at the public scene from behind, a view at the same time vaudevillian and philosophic.
Indirect perception is at once the basis for Joyces peculiar locutions, conveying incompatible double and triple meanings, and also an account of how the mind works.
Thus, Beckman shows, the object world in the Wake is as unstable as a troubled dream, accessible only by glimpses and guesses at suspected overtones of significance.
If the Wake shows only the wrong side of things, this perception hardly belongs to the Wake alone, but Beckman maintains that no other text has presented this idea with such imitative power, applied
it to life so energetically, or wrung so much humor from it.
In the Wake, Joyce has made his case for choosing the wrong and even oddball way of considering the human situationas opposed to the everpresent culture of received opinionsand he creates a book of life that goes nowhere and everywhere, doubling back on itself, methodically seeing things the wrong way, and conjuring up characters, events, and meanings that are inherently reversible.
Written for students of the Wake and Joyce scholars and critics seeking innovative commentary that renders familiar passages fresh, Joyces Rare View offers new, close readings of a myriad of passages and phrases in the Wake, illuminating many of the themes of this encyclopedic satire.
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