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The Strong Spirit - History, Politics and Aesthetics in the Writings of James Joyce 1898-1915 (Hardcover)
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The Strong Spirit - History, Politics and Aesthetics in the Writings of James Joyce 1898-1915 (Hardcover)
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Scholarly accounts of Joyce's early work have traditionally
resorted to two historical keys to try to unlock it: a concept of
the Dublin and Ireland in which he grew to adulthood as stagnant
and backward, and an emphasis on 1904, the year of the supposedly
crucial break in which Joyce quit Ireland for continental Europe
and could begin his great modernist literary project. But modernist
or no, Joyce's works are always about Ireland, and he remained
vitally in touch with Irish historical developments throughout his
life. This study aims to be the first comprehensive historicisation
of Joyce's writings 1898-1915 in relation to the distinct phases
and shifting currents of British-Irish history during the period.
At the turn of the century, when a concept of `national resurgence'
is much in the Irish air, in his earliest essays, Joyce meditates
on art as an anti-colonial and emancipatory project that addresses
questions of freedom and justice in its own distinctive way. His
early essays produce a compelling declaration of a principle of
autonomy at a specific historical moment in a colonial culture.
However, successive historical events - the crises surrounding the
Land Act, the United Irish League and Devolution, the election of
1906, the Third Home Rule Bill crisis - call the emancipatory
project ever more sharply into question. Thus `the strong spirit'
which Joyce had initially thought might transcend and even conquer
the effects of history becomes indissolubly wedded to radical
historical scepticism. Through Dubliners, Stephen Hero, the
`Triestine Writings' and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man to
Exiles, Joyce responds to his predicament by examining recent Irish
history and the place of the intellectual and artist within it in a
variety of extremely subtle and complex or, in Joycean terms,
`labyrinthine' forms of writing.
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