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Joyce's Finnegans Wake - The Curse of Kabbalah: Volume 3 (Paperback)
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Joyce's Finnegans Wake - The Curse of Kabbalah: Volume 3 (Paperback)
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This third in a series continues this non-academic author's
ground-breaking word by word analysis of James Joyce's Finnegans
Wake, Joyce's last blessing on mankind. This volume covers chapters
1.5 and 1.6 with the intent to explore them as art objects, to
examine how they work as art. By contrast with previous
reduction-based chapters, Chapter 1.5 features expansion, One
becoming Many. The spirit of the female principle registered in
ALP's letter or "mamafesta" hatches the expansion. This chapter
honors creativity in literature along with the human female
instinct for giving birth to new human potential. An
academically-oriented Professor explores but misses the meaning of
the letter. Aristotle's concept of the infinite and the legend of
Krishna injecting independence in Gopi milk women frame the
chapter. Chapter 1.6 brings back the forces of reduction, Many
becoming One. Instead of the female hatching the new, here the male
spirit smothers new possibilities in favor of control. Shaun
hijacks questions put by Shem to others and reduces their
potentially different answers to his answer. The charming fable of
Mookse and Gripes modeled on Aesop's "sour grapes" explores the
schism between the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches;
while arguing, both fail to notice the potential presence of the
Holy Spirit. These two chapters feature two very different
processes, the maternal process and the excremental process, the
mother's womb in chapter 1.5 and the colon in chapter 1.6. The
mother releases the new child and the colon the same old waste.
Distorted spirit in the colon-inspired chapter sponsors Shaun
sodomizing his sister. Joyce's masterful synergism of style and
content continues. For example: Chapter 1.6 includes a second fable
about Burrus and Caseous], the name suggesting butter. The language
used by Joyce takes on the characteristics of butter; like
dependent humans, the words change shape and spread easily.
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