Wednesday 31 January 2018

Monday, 29 January 2018

We read as far as "Fair man and foul suggestion." (445.9)

As Shaun seems to have gotten increasingly aggressive about what he will do, how he will treat anyone who sings/says (?) 'Charley you're my darling'* to his sister, Issy, we started wondering about the context of all these vicious threats and asking ourselves whether Shaun is really such a sadistic person. After all he himself proclaims, 'I'll have plenary satisfaction,...'

Below is what Joseph Campbell** writes about the general context of Finnegans Wake:

"Running riddle and fluid answer, Finnegans Wake is a mighty allegory of the fall and resurrection of mankind. It is a strange book, a compound of fables, symphony, and nightmare - a monstrous enigma beckoning imperiously from the shadowy pits of sleep. Its mechanics resemble those of a team, a dream which has freed the author from the necessities of common logic and has enabled him to compress all periods of history, all phases of individual and racial development, into a circular design, of which every part is beginning, middle, and end.
In a gigantic wheeling rebus, dim effigies rumble past, disappear into foggy horizons, and are replaced by other images, vague but half-consciously familiar. On this revolving stage, mythological heroes and evens of remotest antiquity occupy the same spatial and temporal planes as modern personages and contemporary happenings. All time occurs simultaneously; Tristram and the Duke of Wellington, Father Adam and Humpty Dumpty merge in a single percept. Multiple meanings are present in every line; interlocking allusions to key words and phrases are woven like fugal themes into the pattern of the work. Finnegans Wake is a prodigious, multifaceted mono myth, not only the cauchemar of a Dublin citizen but the dreamlike saga of guilt-stained, evolving humanity."

Personally I find consolation when I think of what we read as taking place in a big dream world!

* Charlie, He's my Darling is a Scottish song and is available in many versions. Here is one that is attributed to the Scottish poet and lyricist, Robert Burns (1759 -1796).
** 'A skeleton key to Finnegans Wake, Unlocking James Joyce's Masterwork' by Joseph Campbell & Henry Morton Robinson, New World Library, p.3, 2005, ISBN 1-57731-405-0


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