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Joyces Mistakes: Problems of Intention, Irony, and Interpretation (Heritage)
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Joyces Mistakes: Problems of Intention, Irony, and Interpretation (Heritage) Hardcover - 2003 - 1st Edition

by Conley, Tim

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Details

  • Title Joyces Mistakes: Problems of Intention, Irony, and Interpretation (Heritage)
  • Author Conley, Tim
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition number 1st
  • Edition 1
  • Condition Used - Good
  • Pages 232
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher University of Toronto Press
  • Date 2003-06
  • Features Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 0802087558.G
  • ISBN 9780802087553 / 0802087558
  • Weight 1.02 lbs (0.46 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.32 x 6.16 x 0.84 in (23.67 x 15.65 x 2.13 cm)
  • Themes
    • Chronological Period: 20th Century
    • Cultural Region: British
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2004296305
  • Dewey Decimal Code 823.912

From the publisher

James Joyce has written that 'the man of genius makes no mistakes; his errors are the portals of discovery.' In Joyces Mistakes, Tim Conley explores the question of what constitutes an 'error' in a work of art. Using the works of James Joyce, particularly Ulysses and Finnegans Wake, as central exploratory fields, Conley argues that an 'aesthetic of error' permeates Joyce's literary productions; readers and criticism of Joyce's texts are inevitably affected by a slippery dialectic between the possibility of mistake and the potential for irony.

Outlining modernism's struggle with textual authority and completion, Conley locates Joyce among his literary contemporaries, including Herman Melville, Marianne Moore, Ezra Pound, and Marcel Proust. He finds that Joyce's reconfigurations of authorial presence and his error-generating methods problematize all attempts to edit, anthologize, and even quote or cite his texts. Yet Conley goes well beyond cataloguing the instances where error is at issue in Joyce's canon; he offers a comprehensive, engaging look at theories of error. He extends his analysis of Joyce to examine the radical reshaping of cognition by 'the textual condition' (McGann), and suggests that the act of reading's propensity for diversity of error makes 'misreadings' valuable critical experiments and the basis of literary theory.

Joyces Mistakes is an absorbing and sophisticated work, a portal of discovery in its own right.