You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

Joyce's Ulysses as National Epic: Epic Mimesis and the Political History of the Nation State » (First)

Book cover image of Joyce's Ulysses as National Epic: Epic Mimesis and the Political History of the Nation State by Andras Ungar

Authors: Andras Ungar
ISBN-13: 9780813024455, ISBN-10: 0813024455
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Date Published: March 2001
Edition: First

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Andras Ungar

Book Synopsis

"An incisive piece of criticism that offers, in an elegant set of readings, new insights into Ulysses as an epic of Irish nationhood. It adds significantly to our understanding of how Joyce's Ulysses, by being national first, is international in the end, by showing how a text produced at a moment of Ireland's achievement of independence can offer a model of new nationhood to the world."--Enda Duffy, University of California, Santa Barbara "Although much has been written recently on the subject of Joyce and history, this illuminating book fills an important critical gap by examining how Ulysses construes the 'epic' as a distinctive discursive domain for historiography."--Dominic Manganiello, University of Ottawa Ungar argues that Joyce's Ulysses is the Irish national epic—a new national epic written at the moment a new nation, the Irish Free State, was being founded, and one that evades the potential constraints of the epic tradition in order to draw attention instead to what Ungar calls "the change required in Ireland's too formulaic self-definition." This is the first full-length study of how Ireland's accession to political sovereignty figures in the compositional design of Ulysses. Ungar explores the parallel between the program of Sinn Fein founder Arthur Griffith and the meeting of Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom, with their dreams of self-expression and continuity. He reads the work as a fable of the new kinds of remembering, relations among ancestors, and "epic rhyming" that are required to imagine a new national entity, and he delineates the features of this fable by carefully wrought closereadings of key moments in the novel. In the process he succeeds in uniting an older, eminently distinguished brand of Joyce criticism with the insights of the younger generation of critics. Ungar adds a wealth of valuable new detail to the relation of Joyce's Ireland and Leopold Bloom's Hungary, which is central to his argument, and ingeniously links Molly Bloom to Stephen Dedalus's focus on the issue of national identity. Andras Ungar teaches in the multidisciplinary program of the Liberal Arts College at Concordia University, Canada.\

Table of Contents

Foreword
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: The Epic Fable: A Negotiation with History and Nationhood1
1The Argument of the Fable: An Overview24
2The Ascent of Stephen Dedalus from Messianic Ambition to Epic Discourse35
3Joyce and the Fate of Arthur Griffith's Resurrection of Hungary in Ulysses49
4Closure and Millicent Bloom67
5Epic Mimesis and the Syntax of Ulysses80
6Other Alternatives: Nationhood and Forgetfulness94
Notes109
Bibliography129
Index147

Subjects