Ulysses in Critical Perspective

Front Cover
Michael Patrick Gillespie, A. Nicholas Fargnoli, Vice-President of the James Joyce Society and Professor of Theology and English A Nicholas Fargnoli
University Press of Florida, 2006 - Literary Criticism - 225 pages
This collection of essays is the first in 15 years to review the current state of theory on James Joyce's Ulysses, and this volume comes more than 100 years after the fictitious Leopold Bloom steps into the novel, a day Joyceans celebrate as Bloomsday. The contributors—well known for their work in James Joyce studies—each provide three assessments in their areas of specialization: a history of the best criticism to date, a timely updating of critical positions, and an agenda for future examination. In clear, accessible language, the collection examines the insights readers can expect from particular modes of inquiry and offers an informed view of theoretical approaches and interpretive trends. For new Joyce scholars, the book provides a highly readable summary of existing criticism. For seasoned Joyceans, it offers a timely and important review of the methodologies that have made significant contributions to understanding the novel. In addition, it surveys an array of feminist scholarship on Ulysses and will stimulate new projects for feminist criticism on the issues of choice and agency.

About the author (2006)

Michael Patrick Gillespie, Louise Edna Goeden Professor of English at Marquette University, is the author or editor of many books, most recently The Aesthetics of Chaos: Nonlinear Thinking and Contemporary Literary Criticism (UPF, 2003).

A. Nicholas Fargnoli, professor of theology and English at Molloy College in Rockville Centre, New York, is president of the James Joyce Society and founder of the Finnegans Wake Society of New York. He is coauthor of James Joyce A to Z and editor of James Joyce: A Documentary Volume, among other works.

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