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James Joyce: The Study of Languages

The Study of Languages

by Dirk Van Hulle (Volume editor)
©2002 Conference proceedings 172 Pages

Summary

The Study of Languages is one of James Joyce’s first essays and an early indication of his lifelong interest in philology, the focus of this volume of essays. The collection investigates three aspects of Joycean linguistics. The first set of essays studies the language of Joyce’s later writings. In the second part, Joyce’s own linguistic investigations are retraced. The third part examines the historical context of ‘popular philology’.
This volume sheds light on the relationship between Joyce’s later writings and his reading of studies by linguists such as Richard Paget, Charles Kay Ogden, Ivor Armstrong Richards, Fritz Mauthner, Otto Jespersen, Richard Chenevix Trench and Max Müller. Based on notebook research and textual genetics, these essays show how important the study of languages was to Joyce and how it played a crucial role in the development of his writings as it contributed and gave shape to the languages of Ulysses and Finnegans Wake.

Details

Pages
172
Year
2002
ISBN (Softcover)
9789052019772
Language
English
Keywords
linguistics popular philology textual genetics
Published
Bruxelles, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien, 2002. 172 pp.

Biographical notes

Dirk Van Hulle (Volume editor)

The Author: Dirk Van Hulle teaches English and German literature at the University of Antwerp and works at the Antwerp James Joyce Centre. He is editor of the online journal Genetic Joyce Studies and the author of Textual Awareness, a genetic study of late manuscripts by James Joyce, Marcel Proust and Thomas Mann (2003).

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Title: James Joyce: The Study of Languages