Thread #25216114
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Completely impenetrable. How do I understand it?
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Why would you want to "understand" such a book if it doesn't hook you in from the first page? It's not like there's any greater wisdom to be extracted from this piece of shit anyway. Better spend brain juice reading Vico or something.
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>>25216114
there's nothing to understand. the "book" is a joke. he wrote it because he thought it would be funny that pretentious retards would discuss what it meant in their salons for the next century. you failed an intelligence check if you kept reading after the first page.
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>>25216185
Your whole argument was "The author views Finnegans Wake as a timewaster for Ivory Tower academics!!!" But the quote you built that entire argument upon has nothing to do with Finnegans Wake. So it completely destroys your argument.
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>>25216180
you're talking to multiple different people
i'm not referencing any quote
i don't read spoilers or plot synopses
even back-cover blurbs
i avoid discussions of works i haven't read and go into everything i read blind with no expectations
i arrived to the conclusion that it's a joke on my own
any reasonable person would
if you look at the gibberish you start seeing things, "if you interpret gibberish this way, it might be an interesting exploration of obscure grammar rules" but you're giving him an awful lot of benefit of the doubt if you assume he meant any of it and wasn't just typing words
i'm not willing to entertain him
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>>25216114
Re-read everything. Read every sentence and every paragraph 3-4 times, or however long it takes until it starts to sink in.
Remember that this is some of the most condensed prose ever written.
>>25216169
lol retard
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>>25216206
I've no doubt Joyce spent hours on single words and sentences. Still doesn't make them anything. Only sadder, perhaps? When I read that he was genuinely surprised at FW's poor reception, I felt so bad for him and for his delusion of this being anything more than an ego mirror for stuffy readers and skimmers.
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>>25216223
Are you referring to the fact this books aims to be the entire history of humankind and its arts? Do you genuinely believe it reaches its goal? What do you say to the kid who tells you he will be an astronaut, "good boy"? The book was doomed to fail with such unrealistic goals. No human can write a single book doing that. It's all just bullshit for intellectuals in the end. Constant allusions and references that only serve themselves get tiring pretty fast too.
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>>25216114
get 50 phds, then you can tackle book one
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>>25216235
you want to sound smart SO bad lmao
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>>25216289
No, I just want someone to make a good point as to why this book is good that doesn't end in "read it aloud in Irish accent" or "it just is" or "it's got le everything in it!". It should be easy for all the high IQ drones of this board who basically read FW for breakfast, right?
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>>25216114
Read The Skeleton Key. Turned FW for me from a completely impenentrable unreadable mess to my favorite book of all time, not kidding. Please please please put the effort in and you will be immensely rewarded.
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>>25216314
Really?! Damn, I might do that myself. But how do you know it’s not just the writer’s own exegesis on it? Wouldn’t your own or getting closer to what you think Joyce was doing be more efficacious? Or is it not so subjective?
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>>25216326
It contains a "translation" of Joyce's text into something a lot more readable, though somewhat abridged, and contains a lot of commentary and explanation from Campbell and Robinson. Campbell is one of the all-time greats though, and few people have EVER understood myth and storytelling like he did. It's worth reading.
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>>25216333
good 2ndary lit is excellent for extremely difficult passages or refining interpretations you've already come to yourself, but don't have the knowledge/experience necessary to take it to the next level. i loved ulysses, and i loved it even more after reading what kiberd and nabokov had to say about it, just to give you an idea.
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>>25216490
You make a good point. I haven’t read any secondary literature before as I said but I know I probably should, for more difficult texts that is. With Ulysses I just reread it quite often because I enjoyed it so much and felt I was finding something new in every revisit. I should probably check something out for that too though. Might find even more I missed, especially parts of Oxen. Thanks anon.
>>25216463
And thanks to you too, this sounds really promising. I’ll definitely give this a look into. I own FW but it’s been pretty much untouched since I got it since I consider it too daunting lol. As is my wont, if I buy a book, I will read through all of it, even if I don’t like it. But Ulysses is my favourite novel and I really admire Joyce’s language experimentation in FW even if I don’t quite get it. But I see the same amount of skill in it that I saw in Ulysses.