[This is part of a longer series – previous post (I.5) – next post (I.7)] Chapter 6 is a Quiz with 12 questions (12 being the number of jurors, disciplines, months, etc.). As you might imagine, this summary is not as helpful as it sounds. The quiz has been written by a comically bad educator (or set of four I … Continue reading Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 6
Tag: literature
Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 5
[This is part of a longer series – previous post (I.4) – next post (I.6)] This chapter was somewhat easier that the preceding two, just because its style (mock-academic) is more consistently maintained. I. Introductory Prayer The gradually accumulating motif of ALP swells to a crescendo as this chapter opens: In the name of Annah the Allmaziful, the Everliving, the … Continue reading Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 5
Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 4
[This is part of a longer series – previous post (I.3) – next post (I.5)] Chapter three ended with HCE safely back in his home ("Humph is in his doge" - 74) in spite of his trial on ambiguous charges. Chapter four is, more or less, a restatement of chapter 3, so far as I can tell, just in a … Continue reading Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 4
Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 3
[This is part of a longer series – previous post (I.2) – next post (I.4)] If Chapter 2 was easier going, chapter 3 gets much harder again. I. Hosty's Decline and Fall I'm reasonably sure it begins with a voice that's cursing Hosty for his song, and then also bemoaning his (not HCE's) fall from grace: "Chest Cee! 'sdense! Corpo … Continue reading Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 3
Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 2
[This is part of a longer series - previous post (I.1) - next post (I.3)] This part of the text is way easier-going than the first chapter. I think to some extent the first chapter is an overture to the book (just like the first 3 lines are an overture to the chapter). And the … Continue reading Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 2
Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 1
[This is part of a longer series - previous post (project intro) - next post (I.2)] Introduction Whenever you read a book you make assumptions as you go along. There is some sort of “narrative contract” between you and the author. Those contracts are all arbitrary and contingent, even in the most “genre-fiction”-type books you … Continue reading Finnegans Wake – Book I Chapter 1
The Most Daunting Reading Project of Them All
[This is part of a longer series - next post (Book I Chapter 1)] There once was a man named Michael Finnegan He had whiskers on his chin-again Shaved them off and they grew in again Poor old Michael Finnegan begin again... I've just spent the last 10 weeks re-reading James Joyce's short stories, novels, Ulysses, … Continue reading The Most Daunting Reading Project of Them All
Jane Austen and the War of Ideas
I read Jane Austen and the War of Ideas, by Marliyn Butler (1975), on the recommendation of an old friend, and also because it was footnoted in each of the introductions to each of Jane Austen’s six major novels, all of which I re-read over the last several months. I’m sure it’s not state-of-the-art Austen scholarship at … Continue reading Jane Austen and the War of Ideas
The Brothers Karamazov – The Beginning of the End of the Reading Project
After all the other novels, short stories and non-fiction pieces, I've finally gotten to the end of my Dostoevsky reading project (which started in June 2010 I believe). All that's left now is the longest and most critically acclaimed Dostoevsky novel of them all - The Brothers Karamazov.I'm not sure how many people read this … Continue reading The Brothers Karamazov – The Beginning of the End of the Reading Project
A Writer’s Diary – 1880-1881
This entry is basically for completeness. Because of ailing health and an increasingly busy social schedule, D. stopped the Writer’s Diary until 1880, when he published a single issue. I’m a little confused about 1881, because it’s not even acknowledged in the otherwise thorough Frank biography, but then it’s there in the translation that I … Continue reading A Writer’s Diary – 1880-1881