james joyce
The complete recordings
Categories:

SR60
CD + 120 pages book
(packed together in a slipcase)
SOLD OUT
This box contains one cd read by James Joyce, including "Eolian Episode" (from Ulysses), recorded in Paris in 1924, and "Anna Livia Plurabelle" (from Finnegans Wake), recorded in 1929, together with "James Joyce" an unpublished book (100 pages) by Eugene Jolas. Edited by Marc Dachy.
This box contains one cd read by James Joyce himself, including "Eolian Episode" (from Ulysses), recorded in Paris in 1924, and "Anna Livia Plurabelle" (from Finnegans Wake), recorded in 1929, together with "James Joyce" an unpublished book (100 pages) by Eugene Jolas, and "Jolas - Joyce A Friendship in the Tower of Babel", an historical introduction by Marc Dachy. This is the first time that such an object is published and it becomes eventually a classic of our Aural Documents series as Break through in grey Room by William Burroughs was a few years ago.
First axis : James Joyce, the writer (his voice on cd)
Irish novelist, noted for his experimental use of language in such works as ULYSSES (1922) and FINNEGANS WAKE (1939). During his career Joyce suffered from rejections from publishers, suppression by censors, and attacks by critics, and misunderstanding by readers. Joyce's technical innovations in the art of the novel include an extensive use of interior monologue; he used a complex network of symbolic parallels drawn from the mythology, history, and literature, and created a unique language of invented words, puns, and allusions. From 1902 Joyce led a nomadic life, which perhaps reflected in his interest in the character of Odysseus. Although he spent long times in Paris, Trieste, Rome, and Zurich, with only occasional brief visit to Ireland, his native country remained basic to all his writings.
When the American writer Max Eastman asked Joyce why the book was written in a very difficult style, Joyce replied: "To keep the critics busy for three hundred years." The novel presents the dreams and nightmares of H.C.Earwicker (Here Comes Everywhere) and his family, the wife and mother Anna Livia Plurabelle, the twins Shem/Jerry and Shaun/Kevin, and the daughter Issy, as they lie asleep throughout the night. In the frame of the minimal central story Joyce experiments with language, combines puns and foreign words with allusions to historical, psychological and religious cosmology. The characters turn up in hundreds of different forms - animal, vegetable an mineral. The last word in the book is 'the', which leads, by Joyce's ever recurrent cycles, to the opening word in the book, the eternal 'riverrun.'