In the Argument of Ulysses
The enigma of James Joyce's Ulysses remains, and the difficulty is far more fundamental than the considerable amount of material written about the novel would suggest. From its publication, books and articles have been written discussing its stylistic singularities, its patterns of allusion, and its various complexes of symbolic meaning. There exists, however, no general agreement about that which would ordinarily be regarded as an antecedent, even a primary, consideration: what happens in the book. It clearly has a protagonist, yet there has been no generally accepted account of what he experiences, or what he does. No one has demonstrated conclusively how Mr. Bloom's odyssey ends-or even whether it ends at all.
The present study is not a "reading" of Ulysses accompanied by an interpretation, but a demonstration of the ways in which the novel works, chapter to chapter, to unfold the story of what its chief characters experience, do, and become.

Stanley Sultan is associate professor of English at Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts.

1123742547
In the Argument of Ulysses
The enigma of James Joyce's Ulysses remains, and the difficulty is far more fundamental than the considerable amount of material written about the novel would suggest. From its publication, books and articles have been written discussing its stylistic singularities, its patterns of allusion, and its various complexes of symbolic meaning. There exists, however, no general agreement about that which would ordinarily be regarded as an antecedent, even a primary, consideration: what happens in the book. It clearly has a protagonist, yet there has been no generally accepted account of what he experiences, or what he does. No one has demonstrated conclusively how Mr. Bloom's odyssey ends-or even whether it ends at all.
The present study is not a "reading" of Ulysses accompanied by an interpretation, but a demonstration of the ways in which the novel works, chapter to chapter, to unfold the story of what its chief characters experience, do, and become.

Stanley Sultan is associate professor of English at Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts.

39.95 Out Of Stock
In the Argument of Ulysses

In the Argument of Ulysses

by Stanley Sultan
In the Argument of Ulysses

In the Argument of Ulysses

by Stanley Sultan

Paperback(1)

$39.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

The enigma of James Joyce's Ulysses remains, and the difficulty is far more fundamental than the considerable amount of material written about the novel would suggest. From its publication, books and articles have been written discussing its stylistic singularities, its patterns of allusion, and its various complexes of symbolic meaning. There exists, however, no general agreement about that which would ordinarily be regarded as an antecedent, even a primary, consideration: what happens in the book. It clearly has a protagonist, yet there has been no generally accepted account of what he experiences, or what he does. No one has demonstrated conclusively how Mr. Bloom's odyssey ends-or even whether it ends at all.
The present study is not a "reading" of Ulysses accompanied by an interpretation, but a demonstration of the ways in which the novel works, chapter to chapter, to unfold the story of what its chief characters experience, do, and become.

Stanley Sultan is associate professor of English at Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814253557
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 11/28/2015
Edition description: 1
Pages: 502
Sales rank: 329,312
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.60(d)
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews