Finnegans Wake: Difference between revisions
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Most of ''Finnegans Wake'' takes place in the suburb of Chapelizod on the westen side of Dublin. | Most of ''Finnegans Wake'' takes place in the suburb of Chapelizod on the westen side of Dublin. | ||
The novel is, “at one level, the story of a family” (Spinks, 128). This family consists of a Dublin publican H.C. Earwicker, his wife Anna Livia Plurabelle, their twin sons Shaun and Shem and their daughter Isabel. These characters, however, appear in many different ways such as different surnames, short cuts or even the phrase “Here Comes Everybody” (Finnegans Wake, 32) – one of the most famous lines | The novel is, “at one level, the story of a family” (Spinks, 128). This family consists of a Dublin publican H.C. Earwicker, his wife Anna Livia Plurabelle, their twin sons Shaun and Shem and their daughter Isabel. These characters, however, appear in many different ways such as different surnames, short cuts or even the phrase “Here Comes Everybody” (Finnegans Wake, 32) – one of the most famous lines of the book – which represents humankind in general. | ||
Another way of dealing with the novel is to see it as “the story of Joyce’s twenty-year labour to develop a style and a mode of narrative presentation with which to represent the dreams, desires and repressions that constitute the ‘unconcious’ of modern culture” (Spinks, 131). | Another way of dealing with the novel is to see it as “the story of Joyce’s twenty-year labour to develop a style and a mode of narrative presentation with which to represent the dreams, desires and repressions that constitute the ‘unconcious’ of modern culture” (Spinks, 131). | ||
Revision as of 16:38, 21 December 2011
Novel by James Joyce, first published in 1939. Parts of an earlier version of the novel, named “Work in Progress” had been published before.
Finnegans Wake is possibly the most experimental work attempted in prose fiction, and at the same time considered to be one of the twentieth century novels that are the most difficult to read. It also has some claim to be the least read major work of Western literature in general. Literary scholars disagree about the question whether the novel tells a story or if it is rather a mosaic of prose fragments (and very often new word compositions) without any clear line. One approach is that “though the book does not offer a conventional narrative, elements of a plot do continue to drift to the surface. […] The Wake’s narrative proceeds vertically, rather than horizontally, as one separate incident after another is piled upon what has gone before” (Begnal, xiv).
Most of Finnegans Wake takes place in the suburb of Chapelizod on the westen side of Dublin. The novel is, “at one level, the story of a family” (Spinks, 128). This family consists of a Dublin publican H.C. Earwicker, his wife Anna Livia Plurabelle, their twin sons Shaun and Shem and their daughter Isabel. These characters, however, appear in many different ways such as different surnames, short cuts or even the phrase “Here Comes Everybody” (Finnegans Wake, 32) – one of the most famous lines of the book – which represents humankind in general.
Another way of dealing with the novel is to see it as “the story of Joyce’s twenty-year labour to develop a style and a mode of narrative presentation with which to represent the dreams, desires and repressions that constitute the ‘unconcious’ of modern culture” (Spinks, 131).
Due to its complexity, Finnegans Wake is open to many kinds of interpretation. Summing up one common interpretation very briefly, it can be stated that the novel deals with the highs and lows in human life, illustrated by the example of H.C. Earwicker and his family.
Sources:
Begnal, Michael H. Dreamscheme. Narrative and Voice in Finnegans Wake. New York: Syracuse University Press.
Begnal, Michael/Eckley, Grace. Narrator and Character in Finnegans Wake. London: Associated University Presses, 1975.
Joyce, James. Finnegans Wake. London: Faber and Faber, 1982.
Spinks, Lee. James Joyce. A Critical Guide. Edinburgh: University Press, 2009.