Quashed Quotatoes
Michael Wood: Finnegans Wake, 16 December 2010
Finnegans Wake
by James Joyce, edited by Danis Rose and John O’Hanlon.
Houyhnhnm, 493 pp., £250, March 2010,978 0 9547710 1 0 Show More
by James Joyce, edited by Danis Rose and John O’Hanlon.
Houyhnhnm, 493 pp., £250, March 2010,
Joyce’s Disciples Disciplined
edited by Tim Conley.
University College Dublin, 185 pp., £42.50, May 2010,978 1 906359 46 1 Show More
edited by Tim Conley.
University College Dublin, 185 pp., £42.50, May 2010,
“... Lewis Carroll seems an obvious precursor of James Joyce in the world of elaborate wordplay, and critics have long thought so. Harry Levin suggested in 1941 that Carroll’s Humpty Dumpty was ‘the official guide’ to the vocabulary of Finnegans Wake. Why wouldn’t he be? He was the inventor of the portmanteau word (‘You see it’s like a portmanteau – there are two meanings packed up into one word’), an inspired parodist of what Saussure later called the arbitrariness of the linguistic sign (that is, its being grounded in nothing but convention) and extremely proud of his ability to ‘explain all the poems that ever were invented – and a good many that haven’t been invented just yet ... ”