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More than four decades after its founding, the Journal of Modern Literature remains a leading scholarly journal in the field of modern and contemporary literature and is widely recognized as such. It emphasizes scholarly studies of literature in all languages, as well as related arts and cultural artifacts, from 1900 to the present. International in its scope, its contributors include scholars from Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceana, and South America.

Showing posts with label James Joyce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Joyce. Show all posts

Monday, July 14, 2025

NEW ISSUE: JML 48.3 "Human-Nonhuman Transgressions and the Global Uncanny" is now LIVE



Journal of Modern Literature 48.3 (Spring 2025) on the theme "Human-Nonhuman Transgressions and the Global Uncanny" is now LIVE on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/55227


Content includes

Ramón E. Soto-Crespo

Editor’s Introduction: Human-Nonhuman Transgressions and the Global Uncanny


Romy Rajan

Subaltern Mosquitoes and Cyborg Histories in Namwali Serpell’s The Old Drift

FREE


Tracy A. Stephens 

Kinship as a Counter to the Settler Gaze in Stephen Graham Jones’s The Only Good Indians 


Emad Mirmotahari 

Revisiting Juan José Saer’s El entenado / The Witness—Forty Years Later 


Isabelle Wentworth

Fluid Dynamics of Queer Desire: Ellen van Neerven’s “Water” and Lía Chara’s Agua 


Trevor Westmoreland

Inverting the Coordinates: Place, Dystopia and Utopia in Mohsin Hamid’s Exit West 


Xiaofan Amy Li

Neo-Surrealism in Hong Kong: The Fiction of Hon Lai-chu and Dorothy Tse


Stanka Radović

Alice in Monsterland: Neocolonial Investigation in J.G. Ballard’s Super-Cannes


Mara Reisman 

Grotesque Spaces and Transformative Nature in Patrick McGrath’s The Grotesque 


Tiasa Bal and Gurumurthy Neelakantan 

Memory, Uncanny, and Spectrality in Joseph Skibell’s A Blessing on the Moon 


Umar Shehzad

“[D]elete the face it’s preferable”: Prosopagnosia as an Artistic Practice in Samuel Beckett’s Work


Xiaoshan Hou and Fuying Shen

Puppet and Paralipsis: The Performance of Maria and the Narrator in Joyce’s “Clay”


Derek Ryan 

Review: Abstraction for All


Monday, June 16, 2025

BOOK NEWS: Celebrate Bloomsday with new Cambridge edition of Ulysses with notes

The Cambridge Ulysses: The 1922 Text with Essays and Notes

By James Joyce

Edited by Catherine Flynn



Cambridge UP, 2025

ISBN: 9781009568449

https://www.cambridge.org/us/universitypress/subjects/literature/irish-literature/cambridge-ulysses-1922-text-essays-and-notes-library-edition?format=HB


James Joyce's Ulysses is considered one of the greatest novels of the twentieth century. This new edition – first published in 2022 to celebrate the centenary of the book's first publication – helps readers to understand the pleasures of this monumental work and to grapple with its challenges. Copiously equipped with maps, photographs, and explanatory footnotes, it provides a vivid and illuminating context for the experiences of Leopold Bloom, Stephen Dedalus, and Molly Bloom, as well as Joyce's many other Dublin characters, on June 16, 1904. Featuring a facsimile of the historic 1922 Shakespeare and Company text, this version includes Joyce's own errata as well as references to amendments made in later editions. Each of the eighteen chapters of Ulysses is introduced by a leading Joyce scholar. These richly informative pieces discuss the novel's plot and allusions, while exploring crucial questions that have puzzled and tantalized readers over the last hundred years.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

  • Provides the 1922 Shakespeare and Company edition with Joyce's own errata notes and an essay on the errata and subsequent editions
  • Includes maps and contextual images that help readers visualize the events of the book
  • Includes a chronology of Joyce's life and contemporaneous events


Catherine Flynn is associate professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of James Joyce and the Matter of Paris (Cambridge University Press, 2019) and the editor of The New Joyce Studies (Cambridge University Press, 2022). Before studying literature, she practiced as an architect in Vienna, Austria, and in her native Ireland.


Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Monday, July 15, 2024

JML 47.3 (Spring 2024) is now LIVE!


 Journal of Modern Literature 47.3 (Spring 2024), with a special guest-edited cluster “Affective Forms of the Modernist Novel,” and a cluster on “Ireland’s Modernists,” is now LIVE on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/52819.

Content includes:

Affective Forms of the Modernist Novel

Doug Battersby
Introduction: Affective Forms of the Modernist Novel

Kirsty Martin
D.H. Lawrence and Shyness

Doug Battersby
Elizabeth Bowen’s Equivocal Modernism

Andrew Bennett and Nicholas Royle
Elizabeth Bowen’s Queer Heart

Rick de Villiers
True Feints: Samuel Beckett and the Sincerity of Loneliness 

Ulrika Maude
“Other kinds of emotions”: Ishiguro’s Late-Modernist Affect 

Derek Attridge
Joycean Form, Emotion, and Contemporary Modernism: Ellmann’s Ducks, Newburyport and McCarthy’s The Making of Incarnation

Ireland’s Modernists

Katherine Franco
FREE

Karl O’Hanlon
Ferdinand Levy: A Harlem Renaissance Dubliner and De-Colonial Cosmopolitanism

Danielle N. Gilman
Elizabeth Bowen’s Critical “Scrap Screen” 

Jivitesh Vashisht
“He will now think he hears her”: Indirect Perception and the Return to Proust in Samuel Beckett’s Ghost Trio

Mantra Mukim
Timbral Poetics: Samuel Beckett and the Impossible Voice

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

BOOK NEWS: Reconceptualizing Nietzsche’s relationship to Irish modernism

Subjectivity and Nationhood in Yeats, Joyce and Beckett: Nietzschean Constellations 

BY MATTHEW FOGARTY


Liverpool UP, 2023

ISBN: 9781802077223 

https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/book/10.3828/9781802077223


Subjectivity and Nationhood in Yeats, Joyce and Beckett: Nietzschean Constellations reconceptualizes Friedrich Nietzsche’s position in the intellectual history of modernism and substantively refigures our received ideas regarding his relationship to these Irish modernists. Building on recent developments in new modernist studies, the book demonstrates that Nietzsche is a modernist writer and a modernist philosopher by drawing new parallels between his engagement with established philosophical theories and the aesthetic practices that Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot identified as quintessentially modernist. With specific reference to key Nietzschean philosophemes — eternal recurrence, the Übermensch, transnationalism, cultural paralysis, and ethical perspectivism — it challenges the longstanding assumption that Yeats, who repeatedly acknowledged his admiration for Nietzsche, is the most ‘Nietzschean’ of these Irish modernists.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

While showing how both Joyce and Beckett are in many important ways more ‘Nietzschean’ than Yeats, this interdisciplinary study makes a number of significant and timely contributions to the fields of Irish studies and modernist studies.


Nietzsche, the Protean philosopher par excellence, must be reinvented by each generation, and yet, in the first decades of the twentieth century, his revolutionary ideas were instrumental in bringing about Irish modernism, here represented by Yeats, Joyce and Beckett. Thanks to Matthew Fogarty’s astute, original, and compelling analyses, we discover an Übermensch speaking with an undeniable Irish accent. —Jean-Michel Rabaté, University of Pennsylvania


Matthew Fogarty is an associate lecturer at Maynooth University and University College Dublin. He has published articles in the Irish Gothic Journal, International Yeats Studies, Modern Drama, and the Journal of Academic Writing. His latest article is forthcoming in the James Joyce Quarterly. His co-edited collection, Ethical Crossroads in Literary Modernism, is forthcoming with Clemson University Press.

Monday, July 31, 2023

A Closer Look at JML 46.3: Maps and Traps in Joyce's Ulysses


In a special feature for the Indiana University Press blog, Sarah Coogan explores the webs of financial and familial obligations in Joyce's Ulysses and challenges typical assumptions about these debts. Read it HERE.

Her JML 46.3 essay is available for FREE; see link in the post.

Monday, July 17, 2023

JML 46.3 (Spring 2023) "Joyce and Beckett" is LIVE!



JML 46.3 (Spring 2023), "Joyce and Beckett," is now LIVE on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/50460


Content includes:


Joyce

Madigan Haley

Modernism’s World Drama: Joyce, Wagner, and the Anti-Systemic Stirrings of a Global Artwork


Michele Chinitz

James Joyce’s Liebestod: Fascism as Civil War


Patrick Eichholz

Joyce, Nussbaum, and the Value of Disgust


Roy Benjamin

Purification Rituals in Joyce


Tristan Power

“That English Paper”: Cannibals, Slaves, and Bits of Fun in Ulysses


Sarah Coogan

“I am other I now”: Identity, Intertextuality, and Networks of Debt in Ulysses

FREE!


Shantam Goyal

New Reading: Notes on a Critical Phenomenology of Reading with Finnegans Wake


Beckett

Trask Roberts

Deconfining Translation in Samuel Beckett’s Le Dépeupleur and The Lost Ones


Cristina Ionica

“For the Sake of Harmony”: Beckett’s Enactment of the Violence of Abstraction in The Lost Ones

FREE!


Ruben Borg

Agency after the Subject: Beckett with Merleau-Ponty


Llewellyn Brown

Quietism and Literary Creation


John Greaney

Beckett and/in Context: A Review of Samuel Beckett and the Politics of Aftermath


Jean-Michel Rabate

A Proposal for a Modest Modernism: A Review of Eliot and Beckett’s Low Modernism by Rick de Villiers


Trask Roberts

Painful Productions: A Review of Hannah Simpson’s Samuel Beckett and the Theatre of the Witness 


Andrew Gaedtke

Reflex Modernism

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Book News: Lyotard's groundbreaking lectures on "infantia" now in English

Readings in Infancy

BY JEAN-FRANÇOIS LYOTARD

EDITED BY ROBERT HARVEY AND KIFF BAMFORD



Bloomsbury Academic, 2023

ISBN: 9781350167360

https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/readings-in-infancy-9781350167360/


"Nobody knows how to write." Thus opens this carefully nuanced and accessible collection of essays by one of the most important writer-philosophers of the twentieth century, Jean-François Lyotard (1924-1998). First published in French in 1991 as Lectures d'enfance, these essays have never been printed as a collection in English. In them, Lyotard investigates his idea of infantia, or the infancy of thought that resists all forms of development, either human or technological.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

Each essay responds to works by writers and thinkers who are central to cultural modernism, such as James Joyce, Franz Kafka, Hannah Arendt, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Sigmund Freud. This volume – with a new introduction and afterword by Robert Harvey and Kiff Bamford – contextualizes Lyotard's thought and demonstrates his continued relevance today.

Contents include:

  • Foreword, Robert Harvey 
  • "Infans," translated by Mary Lydon
  • "Return: Joyce," translated by Robert Harvey & Mark S. Roberts.
  • "Prescription: Kafka," translated by Christopher Fynsk
  • "Survivor: Arendt," translated by Robert Harvey & Mark S. Roberts
  • "Words: Sartre," translated by Jeffrey Mehlman
  • "Disorder: Valéry," translated by Robert Harvey
  • "Voices: Freud," translated by Georges Van Den Abbeele
  • Afterword, Kiff Bamford 


Robert Harvey is distinguished professor emeritus at Stony Brook University. His most recent books are Sharing Common Ground: A Space for Ethics (Bloomsbury, 2017) (translations in Japanese and French forthcoming in 2020), a translation of Deguy's To That Which Ends Not: Threnody (Spuyten Duyvil, 2018), Witnessness: Beckett, Levi, Dante and the Foundations of Ethics (Continuum, 2010), which appeared in French as Témoignabilité (MetisPresses, 2015), and De l’exception à la règle (Éditions Lignes, 2006) on USA PATRIOT Act. He is a major co-editor of the Œuvres complètes of Marguerite Duras in the Pléiade edition with Gallimard.

Kiff Bamford is reader in contemporary art at Leeds Beckett University, with research interests in performance art and continental philosophy. He has published widely on the work of French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard with a focus on the inter-relationship between art and philosophy. Monographs include: Jean-François Lyotard: Critical Lives (Reaktion, 2017) and  Lyotard and the figural in Performance, Art and Writing (Continuum, 2012). Bamford edited and introduced the collection Jean-François Lyotard: The Interviews and Debates (Bloomsbury, 2020). 

Thursday, May 5, 2022

Book News: the gramophone's influence in Irish literature

 Ireland’s Gramophones: Material Culture, Memory, and Trauma in Irish Modernism

BY ZAN CAMMACK



Clemson UP, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-949-97977-0

https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/books/id/55431/


Because gramophonic technology grew up alongside Ireland’s progressively more outspoken and violent struggles for political autonomy and national stability, Irish Modernism inherently links the gramophone to representations of these dramatic cultural upheavals. Many key works of Irish literary modernism—like those by James Joyce, Elizabeth Bowen, and Sean O’Casey—depend upon the gramophone for their ability to record Irish cultural traumas both symbolically and literally during one of the country’s most fraught developmental eras. In each work the gramophone testifies of its own complexity as a physical object and its multiform value in the artistic development of textual material. In each work, too, the object seems virtually self-placed—less an aesthetic device than a “thing” belonging primordially to the text. The machine is also often an agent and counterpart to literary characters. Thus, the gramophone points to a deeper connection between object and culture than we perceive if we consider it as only an image, enhancement, or instrument. This book examines the gramophone as an object that refuses to remain in the background of scenes in which it appears, forcing us to confront its mnemonic heritage during a period of Irish history burdened with political and cultural turbulence.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

The specificity with which this book, as quoted above, documents the arrival of the Edison’s invention is characteristic of its good use of historical sources to evoke the impact of the phonograph and later the gramophone in Ireland. Another strength is the alignment of such historical details to the machine’s technical realities; this is a book that uses diagrams, graphs, and tables to considerable critical effect. [...] In its marrying of careful textual analysis to historical detail and conceptual sophistication this lucid and engagingly written study should have a significant impact on future considerations of the intersection between technology and memory in Irish writing.

--Tom Walker, Estudios Irlandeses


Zan Cammack is a lecturer in the Department of English and Literature at Utah Valley University. Her research primarily focuses on studies of material culture in nineteenth and twentieth-century literature. She has published on Elizabeth Bowen, G.B. Shaw, Lennox Robinson, Elizabeth Gaskell, and Jane Austen (the latter two publications are manifestations of deep fangirling of said authors). Her current work is situated at the intersection of material culture and gender studies, including work on female performance studies in Samuel Beckett’s plays and flapper fashion and British politics.

Monday, April 11, 2022

JML 45.2 (Winter 2022) is LIVE!


JML 45.2 (Winter 2022) on the theme "Reclaiming Tradition and Contingency" is now live on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/47651.


Contents

Charlotte Fox 

“Reclaiming” tradition: An exploration of literary influence in Helen Macdonald’s H Is for Hawk 


K. Joudry

The Gospel According to Bolo 


Emily Anderson

An “unseemly joke”: Service-author Stories and Wyndham Lewis’s Blasting and Bombardiering (1937)


Rachel Gaubinger 

The “Voiceless Language” of Sisters: Queer Possibility in E.M. Forster’s Howards End 

FREE


Niklas Cyril Fischer 

E.M. Forster, Realism, and the Style of Progressive Nostalgia


Gurumurthy Neelakantan 

Philip Roth’s Politics of Freedom in the American Trilogy 


Caroline Gelmi 

Vachel Lindsay and the Primitive Singing of the New Poetry


André Furlani

Walking toward Genre: The Pedestrian Excursus


Jack Quirk 

The Potentiality of Paralysis in Joyce’s “Counterparts” 


John Attridge

Contingent Sociality and Same-sex Desire in À la Recherche du Temps Perdu 


Reviews

Jake O’Leary

Politics and Literature in Interwar Britain’s Only Women-Controlled Weekly Review


Robert Harris

Making Him New: Ezra Pound in the Twenty-First Century


Chen Lin

The “wholeness” of T.S. Eliot: A Review of T. S. Eliot’s Dialectical Imagination


Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Book News: The satiric mentality at work in modernist writing

Satiric Modernism

BY KEVIN RULO



Clemson University Press, 2021

ISBNs: 978-1-949-97989-3 Hardback, 9781949979909 Ebook

https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/books/id/54544/

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

In this book, Kevin Rulo reveals the crucial linkages between satire and modernism. He shows how satire enables modernist authors to evaluate modernity critically and to explore their ambivalence about the modern. Through provocative new readings of familiar texts and the introduction of largely unknown works, Satiric Modernism exposes a larger satiric mentality at work in well-known authors like T.S. Eliot, James Joyce, Wyndham Lewis, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, and Ralph Ellison and in less studied figures like G.S. Street, the Sitwells, J.J. Adams, and Herbert Read, as well as in the literature of migration of Sam Selvon and John Agard, in the films of Paolo Sorrentino, and in the drama of Sarah Kane. In so doing, Rulo remaps the last hundred years as an era marked distinctively by a new kind of satiric critique of and aesthetic engagement with the temporal fissures, logics, and regimes of modernity. This ambitious, expansive study reshapes our understanding of modernist literary history and will be of interest to scholars of twentieth century and contemporary literature as well as of satire.


'Kevin Rulo’s Satiric Modernism is an intellectually capacious rethinking of the relationships among literary (and ultimately filmic and theatrical) modernism, postmodernism, and satire. Rulo posits that one can find satire’s traces in a variety of modernist manifestations—hidden, as it were, in plain sight. The book contains startlingly original readings, unexpected critical juxtapositions, and creative treatments of the affiliations between modernist texts and texts that both look backward and forward from them. Satiric Modernism will be consulted with keen interest by scholars both of modernist studies and of the history and theory of satire.'

Scott W. Klein, Wake Forest University


'In this powerful, capacious, deeply researched book, Kevin Rulo teaches us that to be modern is also to be dismayed about being modern and to express that dismay in the form of satire: satirical modes of analysis and expression are foundational to modernism in all of its various phases and incarnations. Lucid and convincing, Satiric Modernism offers us bracing, revisionary understandings of each author and every text that falls under Rulo’s inquiry, even—especially—those authors with whom we are familiar, as well as those beyond the boundaries conventional to studies of the field. Not afraid to explore even the darkest aspects of these satirists’ worlds, demonstrating how each writer also turns the scalpel on their own failings, Rulo shows how these artists clear a way to make it new, building magnificently on excoriated ground.'

John Whittier-Ferguson, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor


Kevin Rulo is a clinical assistant professor in the English Department at the Catholic University of America. He has published in The Review of English Studies, Neohelicon, and The T.S. Eliot Studies Annual.

Friday, November 12, 2021

Book News: Vertical ascension and growing anxiety in 20th century literature

 The Vertical Imagination and the Crisis of Transatlantic Modernism

BY PAUL HAACKE

Oxford UP, 2021

ISBN: 9780198851448 hardback

https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-vertical-imagination-and-the-crisis-of-transatlantic-modernism-9780198851448?cc=us&lang=en&#


From the invention of skyscrapers and airplanes to the development of the nuclear bomb, ideas about the modern increasingly revolved around vertiginous images of elevation and decline and new technologies of mobility and terror from above. In The Vertical Imagination and the Crisis of Transatlantic Modernism, Paul Haacke examines this turn by focusing on discourses of aspiration, catastrophe, and power in major works of European and American literature as well as film, architecture, and intellectual and cultural history.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

This wide-ranging and pointed study begins with canonical fiction by Franz Kafka, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and John Dos Passos, as well as poetry by Guillaume Apollinaire, Hart Crane, and Aimé Césaire, before moving to critical reflections on the rise of New York City by architects and writers from Le Corbusier to Simone de Beauvoir, the films of Alfred Hitchcock and theories of cinematic space and time, and postwar novels by Kurt Vonnegut, Thomas Pynchon, and Leslie Marmon Silko, among many other examples. In tracing the rise and fall of modernist discourse over the course of the long twentieth century, this book shows how visions of vertical ascension turned from established ideas about nature, the body, and religion to growing anxieties about aesthetic distinction, technological advancement, and American capitalism and empire. It argues that spectacles of height and flight became symbols and icons of ambition as well as direct indexes of power, and thus that the vertical transformation of modernity was both material and imagined, taking place at the same time through the rapidly expanding built environment and shifting ideological constructions of "high" and "low."


  • Rethinks modernist discourse from the rise of the twentieth century to the post-1945 and post-9/11 periods
  • Shows how technologies, ideologies, and metaphors of verticality became central for re-envisioning the meaning of modernity
  • Develops a comparative approach to major and lesser-known works of European and American literature as well as intellectual and cultural history, architecture, and film
  • Engages with inter-disciplinary work in critical theory, urban and environmental studies, film and media studies, transnationalism and empire, and new materialisms and secularisms
  • Studies a wide range of authors including Franz Kafka, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, John Dos Passos, Guillaume Apollinaire, Hart Crane, Aimé Césaire, Kurt Vonnegut, Thomas Pynchon, and Leslie Marmon Silko


Paul Haacke has taught at UC Berkeley, New York University, and the Pratt Institute. His academic writing has appeared in a range of publications, including diacritics, French Forum, and the Journal of Cinema and Media Studies.

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

JML 44.3 (Spring 2021) is LIVE!

 


JML 44.3 (Spring 2021) is now available. Find it on JSTOR at https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jmodelite.44.issue-3 and on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/45120


From modernist impasses to our post-literary moment

Mi Jeong Lee

The Ugly Politics of (Im)passivity, or Why Conrad’s Anarchists are Fat


Laurel Harris

Impassagenwerk: Jean Rhys’s Interwar Fiction and the Modernist Impasse

FREE!


Elysia Balavage

Illumination, Transformation, and Nihilism: T. S. Eliot’s Empty Spaces


Alexandra Edwards 

Orlando: A Fanfiction; or, Virginia Woolf in the Archive of Our Own


Louis Armand

“He Proves by Algebra”: James Joyce’s Post-Literary Incest Machines


Infinities of the post-

Arleen Ionescu 

Blanchot in Infinite Conversation(s) with Beckett 


Jeffrey Peer 

Hot Spinsters: Revisiting Barbara Pym’s Virtuous Style


Farah Ali

Freedom as a Mirage: Sexual Commodification in Harold Pinter’s Films


Renée Tursi

Searching Pragmatism in Marilynne Robinson 


Marija Grech

Re-Visions of the End: Christine Brooke-Rose and the Post-Literary 

FREE!


Reviews

Jonathan Culler

Intertexts of Intertextuality 


Robert Savino Oventile

Transports, Earthbound


Omri Moses

Technological Paranoia: A Review of Andrew Gaedtke’s Modernism and the Machinery of Madness


James Martell

Logic of Missed Encounters: A Review of Arka Chattopadhyay’s Beckett, Lacan, and the Mathematical Writing of the Real 


Ruben Borg

Beckett’s Insistent Bodies


Susan Mooney

The Insider’s View of Beckett’s Re-Generating Art


Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Book News: The Irish Celt figure in modern literature

 Against the Despotism of Fact: Modernism, Capitalism, and the Irish Celt

BY T.J. BOYNTON 



SUNY Press, 2021

Hardcover ISBN13: 978-1-4384-8181-4

Paperback ISBN13: 978-1-4384-8180-7

http://www.sunypress.edu/p-7009-against-the-despotism-of-fact.aspx


Emerging at a moment of escalating colonial conflict between England and Ireland, the figure of the Irish Celt enjoyed a long and varied career in both English and Irish literature from the late Victorian era to World War II. While this figure assumes many forms and functions, T. J. Boynton argues that he is consistently cast as inherently resistant to capitalism. 

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

Beginning with an innovative reassessment of Matthew Arnold’s The Study of Celtic Literature, from which the book also takes its title, Against the Despotism of Fact offers new readings of major works by writers such as Kipling, Conrad, Lawrence, Yeats, Joyce, and Beckett. In their writing, Boynton argues, the Irish Celt served as a transnational vehicle of modernist experimentation geared toward interrogating the imperial, social, and pop-cultural dimensions of capitalist modernity. Making a significant contribution to Irish studies, modernist studies, and postcolonial studies, Against the Despotism of Fact draws attention to not only the prevalence but also the critical potential of this fraught figure.


Against the Despotism of Fact is an exciting contribution to Irish literary studies, to the study of modernist literature and culture, to the study of postcolonial, materialist, and globalist theory, and it is also a major intervention in the study of a range of important writers, from J. M. Synge to Samuel Beckett. This is an exciting work, building on existing scholarship and research, that will be widely discussed, and cited for years to come.” 

— Enda Duffy, author of The Speed Handbook: Velocity, Pleasure, Modernism


T. J. Boynton is assistant professor of English at Wichita State University.

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

“Ineluctable visuality”: Philip Sicker’s Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture

Review by
Katharina Rajabi
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU Munich)


Philip Sicker. Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture. Cambridge UP, 2018. x, 276 pp. $105 hardback. $84 ebook.

Joyce’s weak eyesight and lifelong eye troubles are well known and consistently invoked to constitute the analytical framing in scholarly works on visuality in his texts (and this review is no exemption). This research into visual perception and media, steadily increasing since the “visual turn,” has repeatedly interpreted the previous relative lack thereof in the vast field of Joyce studies in the light of a possible misconception that Joyce’s poor sight resulted in the privileging of the acoustic over the visual in his writing. In contrast, scholars underlining the importance of the visual invert this conclusion, suggesting instead that Joyce’s ocular ailments indeed caused a preoccupation with perception and visuality that is undeniably present in his works.

Philip Sicker, too, begins his study by drawing on this correlation, arguing that “Ulysses, composed as Joyce’s vision deteriorated […], is his ultimate act of capturing and preserving the eye’s encounter with reality, a transaction conducted via the gazes of Stephen and Bloom and through a multitude of refractory narrative lenses” (2). His aim, then, is to illustrate the significance of visual perception, recognized as being markedly embodied and mediated, as well as of those visual media themselves and their structures and regimes, showing in detail how Ulysses is informed by optical media techniques and practices. In Joyce’s text, Sicker argues, perception and “technologies of sight” (10) constitute an epistemological mode, a specific way of accessing reality: “Far from alienating subjects from the object world and one another, the perceptual habits shaped by visual technology sometimes enable Bloom and Stephen to organize and penetrate reality more deeply” (19). His analysis of visuality in Ulysses thus focuses on its epistemological, rather than its “socioeconomic” (9) implications – in contrast to preceding studies that considered visual phenomena in context with their examinations of commodity culture in Joyce. 

Each chapter of Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture centers on a different figuration of the visual. Although the title suggests a study primarily on Ulysses and film, Sicker’s monograph provides a much more far-ranging exploration. While film is certainly central to the author’s argument, the two chapters dedicated to film (chapters five and six), based on previous articles, are supplemented and framed with – in effect even more inspiring – in-depth analyses of visual media from the diorama to the stereoscope, of the text’s philosophical reflections on the conditions of vision, and of perceptual figures and constellations from the flaneur to the act of seeing as an intersubjective experience. Building on existing scholarship and incorporating relevant theoretical positions, Sicker thus delivers, for the first time, a comprehensive account of visuality in Ulysses

The opening chapter, “Ineluctable Visuality: Stephen’s Ways of Seeing,” analyzes the way visual perception is conceptualized and reflected on in the first three episodes of Ulysses, with reference to optical media including the diorama and the panorama. Focusing, in particular, on “Proteus,” Sicker delineates how the discourse on perception, manifested in optical experiments and meditations on philosophical theories of vision, centering on the subject of vision and the ontological status of the perceived object, is negotiated between idealist and materialist notions. 

The second chapter, “Stephen in the Gaze of Others,” in turn, examines the reflexivity of sight, the “condition of being watched” (15), an experience central to modernist explorations of vision, incorporating the theories of Lacan and Sartre, and the panopticon as a medial figuration of this perceptual constellation, as well as placing this within the context of religion. While Sicker acknowledges that Bloom, too, constantly finds himself in the gaze of others, he does not pursue this aspect further, choosing instead to focus entirely on Stephen. Even if understandable with regard to the structure of his argument, this nonetheless seems like a regrettable omission, since the consideration of Bloom – himself famously ruminating on the gaze of the other and seeing “ourselves as others see us” – would not only be interesting in this context, but would actually support Sicker’s argument regarding the reflexivity of vision. The constellation Bloom – Boylan, especially at the end of “Lestrygonians,” or the perceptual structure of “Cyclops,” for example, would be worth further analysis against this backdrop. 

Chapter three, “Snapshots from the Pavement: Bloom as Modernist Flâneur,” turns to Bloom, reading him, with Benjamin, as figuration of the flaneur. Focusing on flanerie as an “observational practice” (13), Sicker traces its connection to commodity culture and equates it with a form of “photographic perception” (19). The fourth chapter reads “Wandering Rocks” against the backdrop of Futurist aesthetics, demonstrating how the text is influenced by Futurist conceptions of mechanics, simultaneity, perspective (from bird’s eye view to fragmentation and close-ups), movement (photodynamism), and the employment of visual analogies. In doing so, Sicker delivers inspiring new findings, as Ulysses’ connection to Futurism has not really been previously explored. 

Chapter five and six focus on film: While chapter five provides a reading of “Nausicaa” informed by psychoanalytic film theory (Mulvey, Metz) which emphasizes the constellation of gazes, their inherent power structures, and the connection of sight and pleasure with regard to the mutoscope, chapter six traces the influence of George Méliès’s trick cinema with its transformations, continuous references to dreams and its spectacle-like quality on “Circe.” Although this connection has been examined by Joycean scholarship before, Sicker, very interestingly, adds the aspect of self-watching and visual reflexivity as a common thread. The last chapter follows this up by exploring Bloom’s and Stephen’s intersubjective perception in “Eumaeus” and “Ithaca” with reference to phenomenological approaches (Merleau-Ponty, Husserl, Lévinas), parting from their shared gaze at Molly’s photograph. Sicker also retrospectively identifies moments of parallel perception earlier in the novel, thus connecting this final chapter of his study to the first one that had focused on Stephen’s gaze and conceptualization of seeing. This clever framing indicates a new accentuation of the question of perception: Instead of thinking about visual perception solely in terms of subject and object of sight, the emphasis on visual reflexivity brings into focus the act of seeing as well as the intersubjective moment. This proves to be a very interesting and productive approach, and, supported by Sicker’s very detailed, thorough, and intent reading and analysis of the text, a major strength of his study.

Because of its admirable all-encompassing conception, however, the study in other regards sometimes tends to remain on the surface and to tie in its observations too neatly with the theory, where at times reading it against the grain would perhaps have resulted in unexpected insights. This becomes especially apparent in Sicker’s analysis of “Nausicaa” where his application of Mulvey’s and Metz’s propositions does not resolve the question of Gerty MacDowell’s agency that he himself had asserted in an earlier reading (see Sickler, “Unveiling Desire”), and instead smooths over the complexity of the optical power structures in the episode. With regard to the gendered aspects of visual media – the commodification of women through pictures and the consequences this entails for desire – following up on the political and economic implications, too, would have been interesting, even if beyond the declared scope of Sicker’s more epistemological approach to the visual. Furthermore, the problem of vagueness arising from a “metaphorical” understanding of optical media that reads them as techniques or practices at times becomes evident, especially in reference to photography. The notion of identifying Bloom with the figure of the flaneur is indeed argued very compellingly, but its subsequent equation with the photographer remains somewhat debatable given the chosen examples from the text. While the mnemonic functionalization of optical impressions and the use of close-up techniques Sicker points out in his analysis provide persuasive evidence, most often it is not clear in what sense exactly Bloom’s perceptions can be termed “pictures.” In the case of photography this is particularly perspicuous, since it does appear in the text explicitly as Sicker himself writes, and so the question arises, why the actual medium is not discussed more thoroughly in this context. Although chapter seven provides a brief analysis of Molly’s photograph, the focus lies more on the act of looking at the picture than on the implications of the medium itself. 

This, however, does not away take from the immense quality of Sicker’s study that, crucially, considers the various visual media in connection with visual perception itself, thus addressing the novel’s examinations of sight in-depth for the first time, emphasizing the “ineluctable” importance of the visual in Ulysses. Identifying the turn of the text’s perceptual discourse away from “static” configurations of the status of subject and object of vision and toward an examination of visual reflexivity and intersubjectivity, is a particularly valuable finding.

Smartly structured and engagingly written, Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture closes a gap in Joyce criticism and brings valuable contributions to modernist studies with its detailed and comprehensive approach. Bringing together and structuring existing findings under the focal point of visual perception, it delivers new insights and inspiring readings of the text and will be the basis for further research into Joyce and visuality.


Works Cited

Sicker, Philip. “Unveiling Desire: Pleasure, Power and Masquerade in Joyce’s ‘Nausicaa’ Episode.” Joyce Studies Annual, vol. 14, 2003, pp. 92-131.


Katharina Rajabi (katharina.rajabi@germanistik.uni-muenchen.de) is a PhD candidate in comparative literature and research associate at the University of Munich. Her dissertation project examines the writing of photography in literary modernism, with a special emphasis on James Joyce.


Monday, April 5, 2021

Book News: Novels navigating new media

 Out of Print: Mediating Information in the Novel and the Book

BY JULIA PANKO

Paperback: 9781625345608

Hardcover: 9781625345592

University of Massachusetts Press, December 2020

https://www.umasspress.com/9781625345608/out-of-print/


Through technological experiments, readers have seen the concept of the book change over the years, and the novel reflects these experiments, acting as a kind of archive for information. Out of Print reveals that the novel continues to shape popular understandings of information culture, even as it adapts to engage with new media and new practices of mediating information in the digital age.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

This innovative study chronicles how the print book has fared as both novelists and the burgeoning profession of information science have grappled with unprecedented quantities of data across the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. As the novel’s archival project took a critical turn from realism to an investigation of the structures, possibilities, and ideologies of information media, novelists have considered ideas about how data can best be collected and stored. Julia Panko pairs case studies from information history with close readings of modernist works such as James Joyce’s Ulysses and Virginia Woolf’s Orlando and contemporary novels from Jonathan Safran Foer, Stephen King, and Mark Z. Danielewski that emphasize their own informational qualities and experiment with the aesthetic potential of the print book.


"This is a complex and fascinating book that has illuminating things to say about the novel as a genre; about the future of the book, the future of the novel, and the future of literary reading; about the form of information and the category of form itself; and about the information ecology of the digital world. It is lucidly and elegantly written, and its scholarship is impressively detailed and rigorous."—John Frow, author of Character and Person

 

"Out of Print explores the continued importance and power of the book in a digital age of increased big data. It draws from many important works of scholarship across the interdisciplinary fields of new media, book history, and literary studies. This weaving together of scholarship and literary texts, from modernism and contemporary literature, is a valuable contribution."—Jessica Pressman, author of Bookishness: Loving Books in a Digital Age


JULIA PANKO is associate professor of English at Weber State University.

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

JML 42.4, A modernist lineage: Joyce, Beckett, Coetzee



JML 42.4 (Summer 2019), on the theme "Joyce, Beckett, Coetzee," is now available!
Read it on JSTOR and Project Muse

The sequence of names heading this issue’s thematic clusters—James Joyce, Samuel Beckett and John M. Coetzee—embody an ideal modernist lineage. Indeed, Beckett began his career as Joyce’s unofficial secretary, and he always named Joyce’s devotion to his art as influencing his decision to pursue a literary rather than academic career. Coetzee, who started out as a computer expert and an English professor, wrote an excellent dissertation on the style of Beckett’s Watt, as well as important essays on Beckett. Beckett offered both a repertoire of literary techniques and a model of ethical integrity. This sequence of names suggests that modernism has not yet lost its purchase as an umbrella term. Modernism has not been replaced by the “posts” that have been tried and petered out, one after the other. 

Issue content includes:

Jean-Michel Rabaté
Editor’s Introduction: Joyce, Beckett, Coetzee

David Spurr 
Trials of the Letter in Joyce and Proust

Neil R. Davison
“Ivy Day”: Dublin Municipal Politics and Joyce’s Race-Society Colonial Irish Jew 

Georgina Binnie 
“Photo girl he calls her”: Re-Reading Milly in Ulysses 

Elizabeth M. Bonapfel 
Joyce’s Punctuation and the Evolution of Narrative in Finnegans Wake 

Megan Girdwood
“Danced through its seven phases”: Samuel Beckett, Symbolism, and Stage Choreographies 

Rick de Villiers 
A Defense of Wretchedness: Molloy and Humiliation 

Patrick Whitmarsh 
“So it is I who speak”: Communicating Bodies in Samuel Beckett’s Happy Days and The Unnamable 

Emilie Morin
Beckett, War Memory, and the State of Exception

Shannon Forest
Challenging Secularity’s Posthistorical “Destination”: J.M. Coetzee’s Radical Openness in the Jesus Novels

Marc Farrant 
Finitizing Life: Between Reason and Religion in J.M. Coetzee’s Jesus Novels

Ian Tan 
Ways into Joycean Silences: Reviewing James Joyce’s Silences 

Michelle Chiang 
Samuel Beckett and Modernist Film Culture: Review of Samuel Beckett and Cinema

Arya Aryan 
The Late Style of Borges, Beckett, and Coetzee as Postmodernist Cynics 

Erin A. Smith
Modernism for the Middle Class