Joyce's Choices
Audio avec voix de synthèse, Braille automatisé
Résumé
This major new study of the textual parallels that permeate James Joyce’s three most widely read works––Dubliners, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, and Ulysses––documents and discusses some eight hundred instances, seven hundred of them in Ulysses… alone, of previously unrecognized, unidentified, or misidentified echoes, most of them verbatim, of antecedent texts ranging from major and minor works of English, Irish, Italian, French and other literatures to the poems, plays, popular songs, hymns, comic operas, triple-deckers, dime novels, penny dreadfuls, and print advertisements of his own day. By meticulously identifying hundreds of previously unknown instances of such intertextual echoes, such conscious or unconscious literary borrowings, Winnick’s study complements prior works on Joyce’s allusive practices by, among others, Weldon Thornton, Don Gifford, and, most recently and comprehensively, Sam Slote, Marc A. Mamigonian, and John Turner, shedding important new light on Joyce’s reading, thematic intentions, and creative technique.