Toccatootletoo! |
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Author:
| Mingus, Elaine |
ISBN: | 978-1-4327-9037-0 |
Publication Date: | May 2012 |
Publisher: | Outskirts Press, Incorporated
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $11.95 |
Book Description:
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In these essays, Elaine Mingus, James Joyce scholar and presenter at Joycean conferences, celebrates the network of connections linking Joyce with some of the great cultural and literary figures in the English language. The pieces include a fascination with the questing youth in the context of the work of Thomas Mann; a study of the striking parallels between Joyce and T.S. Eliot; and a look into how the shared literary roots of Joyce and William Blake wound up creating a virtual...
More DescriptionIn these essays, Elaine Mingus, James Joyce scholar and presenter at Joycean conferences, celebrates the network of connections linking Joyce with some of the great cultural and literary figures in the English language. The pieces include a fascination with the questing youth in the context of the work of Thomas Mann; a study of the striking parallels between Joyce and T.S. Eliot; and a look into how the shared literary roots of Joyce and William Blake wound up creating a virtual conversation between two giants of literature. Mingus also explores in these pages the resonances between Joyces trademark playfulness and the musings of Lewis Carroll, and she finds Joycean echoes, too, in Charlie Chaplin, who so well resurrected the trickster archetype that captivated the Dubliner. The studies here approach broader topics, as well, providing an in-depth exploration of Joyces use of mythology in an essay that reminds us how Joyces work always addressed the greatest themes in the human experience. Rounding out the collection, Mingus develops a thesis on Joyces critical reliance on gossip as a mode of language, illuminating the great authors deep affinity for the common man and his use of words. Scholars and more casual readers alike will find Mingus to be at once insightful and sweeping in her analysis, and able to demonstrate once again why James Joyce remains a towering figure in world literature.