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313 pages
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Description

An indispensable resource for scholars and students of James Joyce, Joyce Studies Annual gathers essays by foremost scholars and emerging voices in the field.

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Publié par
Date de parution 18 janvier 2017
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780823279074
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 3 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,2700€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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Joyce Studies AnnualAdvisory Board
Derek Attridge,University of York Margot Backus,University of Houston Morris Beja,Ohio State University John Bishop,University of California, Berkeley Sheldon Brivic,Temple University Richard Brown,University of Leeds Vincent Cheng,University of Utah Tim Conley,Brock University Neil Davison,Oregon State University Michel Delville,University of Liège Kevin Dettmar,Pomona College Kimberly Devlin,University of California, Riverside Finn Fordham,University of London Hans Walter Gabler,LudwigMaximilians University Arnold Goldman,Lewes University of the Third Age Michael Groden,University of Western Ontario Clive Hart,University of Essex David Hayman,University of Wisconsin Philip Kitcher,Columbia University Garry Leonard,University of Toronto at Scarborough Geert Lernout,University of Antwerp Morton Levitt,Temple University Vicki Mahaffey,University of Illinois Dominic Manganiello,University of Ottawa John McCourt,University of RomeMargot Norris,University of California, Irvine JeanMichel Rabaté,University of Pennsylvania John Paul Riquelme,Boston University Michael Seidel,Columbia University Stuart Sherman,Fordham University Sam Slote,Trinity College, Dublin Thomas Staley,Ransom Humanities Center, University of Texas Fritz Senn,Zurich James Joyce Foundation Joseph Valente,University of Buffalo
Joyce Studies Annual
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Fordham University Press
CopyrightFordham University Press
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
ISSN: ISBN:
Printed in the United States of America        
Joyce Studies Annual
Founded by Thomas Staley, University of Texas, Acquired and published by Fordham University Press,
Joyce Studies Annualis coedited by Professors Moshe Gold and Philip Sicker of the Fordham University English Department and published annually by Fordham University Press.Joyce Studies Annualwas founded by Thomas Staley at the University of Texas and was published there under his editorship for fourteen years, through.
       editors invite significant contributions on Joyce and: The closely related topics. In keeping with its founding tradition,JSApub lishes essays of greater length and scope than are normally found in schol arly journals. While not limited to longer essays, it welcomes ambitious studies in the areas of textual, historical, theoretical, and comparative analysis. We will consider essays up tomanuscript pages in length.
                                    send: Please manuscripts, inquiries, and editorial correspondence to Philip Sicker / Moshe Gold,Joyce Studies Annual, Department of English, Fordham University, Bronx, NY. Writers should send manuscripts as hard copy and forward electronic versions as Microsoft Word attachments to sicker@fordham.edu and mgold@fordham.edu.
    : Manuscripts must conform toThe Chicago Manual of Style. Unless otherwise indicated, essays should refer to the standard editions of Joyce’s works listed below. References to these editions and to Ellmann’s biography should be cited parenthetically within the body of the essay, using the abbreviations that follow. Quotations fromUlyssesshould be cited by episode and line number; quotations fromFinnegans Wake should be cited by page and line number.
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James Joyce,Collected Poems.New York: Viking,. James Joyce,The Critical Writings of James Joyce, ed. Ellsworth Mason and Richard Ellmann. New York: Viking,. James Joyce,Dubliners, ed. Margot Norris. New York: Norton, . James Joyce,Exiles.New York: Penguin,. James Joyce,Finnegans Wake. New York: Viking,. James Joyce,Giacomo Joyce, ed. Richard Ellmann. New York: Viking, Richard Ellmann,James Joyce. New York: Oxford University Press,. The James Joyce Archive, ed. Michael Groden et al. New York and London: Garland Press,. James Joyce,Letters of James Joyce, Vol. I, ed. Stuart Gilbert. New York: Viking,. James Joyce,Letters of James Joyce, Vols. II and III, ed. Richard Ellmann. New York: Viking,. James Joyce,A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: Text, Criticism and Notes.Chester G. Anderson. New York: Viking, . James Joyce,Stephen Hero, ed. John J. Slocum and Herbert Cahoon. New York: New Directions,. James Joyce,Selected Letters of James Joyce, ed. Richard Ellmann. New York: Viking,. James Joyce,Ulysses: A Critical and Synoptic Edition, ed. Hans Walter Gabler et al. New York and London: Garland,, . In paperback by Garland, Random House, and Penguin .
Preface
C O N T E N T S
My Life in Joyce Studies, Such as It Is MORTON P. L EVI TT
Joyce’s “meanderthalltale”: Tracing the Passed/Past inFinnegans Wake KI MBERLY J . DE VLIN
Textual Authority and Diagnostic Joyce: ReReading the Way We Read theWake JE REMY COL ANGELO
Degeneration, Decadence, and Joyce’s Modernist Disability Aesthetics MARION QUI RICI
Patriarchal Dissolution inFinnegans Wake:Reading Joyce’s “porterpeace” RODNEY X . S HAR KEY
ElegaicUlysses TI MOTHY MA RTI N
Real Time inUlysses LE ONID OSS ENY
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EpiphanicUlysses: Joyce’s Trail of Breadcrumbs MI CHAE L OP EST
Bronze by Goldenhair: Music as Language inChamber Music and “Sirens” PATRI CK MI LIA N
Speak, Suck, Bite . . . Kiss: Mother–Son Love in Joyce HAILEY HAF FEY
A Little Cloud of Queer Suspicion MI CHAE L F. DAV IS
Joyce Studies AnnualTen Year Indexes:  CATHAL PRATT
List of Contributors
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P R E F A C E
This volume ofJoyce Studies Annualis our tenth, marking a full decade of yearly publication since our acquisition of the journal from the Univer sity of Texas in. During this period,JSAhas publishedarticles, notes, interviews, reviews, and works of visual art, covering,pages. We’re grateful to Fordham University Press for its continuing support, and to the members of our advisory board for their generous readings and invaluable advice. Like its predecessors, thevolume reflects our guid ing mission by bringing together Joyce scholarship that covers a wonder fully eclectic range of critical trajectories, from genetic studies to psychoanalytic, disability, and queer inquiries. As we reflect on a decade of scholarship, the volume fittingly begins with Morton Levitt’s retrospective essay, a personal narrative in which he traces the rise and development of pedagogy, criticism, and symposia devoted to Joyce over the past sixty years. An “unreconstructed New Critic” and a distinguished scholar of his generation, Levitt titles his arti cle “My Life in Joyce Studies, Such as It Is” and begins by observing, “I have never thought of myself as a Joycean.” Despite his disarming mod esty, Levitt’s wideranging books and articles have helped to establish Joyce’s central place in the Modernist canon and enriched our under standing of Bloom’s Jewishness as “central to Joyce’s vision of the world.” Indeed, Levitt holds that in writingUlyssesJoyce “converted himself” to produce “the first modern Jewish novel.” Recalling his initial encounter with Joyce’s fiction as an undergraduate in the mids, Levitt describes a time in American academic history when the Irish writer was often stigmatized as a “fraud,” derided as a “nasty little joke,” or dismissed as unreadable. However, as a young professor attending conferences in Dub lin, Trieste, and Paris, Levitt discovered what he terms the “unique humanity” of the Joycean scholarly community—a pervasive camaraderie
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