Book contents
- James Joyce and the Matter of Paris
- James Joyce and the Matter of Paris
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Matter of Paris
- Chapter 1 Paris Encountered
- Chapter 2 Paris Recognized: Stephen Hero and Portrait
- Chapter 3 Paris Digested: “Lestrygonians”
- Chapter 4 Paris Reenvisioned: “Circe”
- Chapter 5 Paris Profanely Illuminated: Joyce’s Walter Benjamin
- Chapter 6 Paris Compounded: Finnegans Wake
- Afterword
- Index
Chapter 3 - Paris Digested: “Lestrygonians”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2019
- James Joyce and the Matter of Paris
- James Joyce and the Matter of Paris
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Matter of Paris
- Chapter 1 Paris Encountered
- Chapter 2 Paris Recognized: Stephen Hero and Portrait
- Chapter 3 Paris Digested: “Lestrygonians”
- Chapter 4 Paris Reenvisioned: “Circe”
- Chapter 5 Paris Profanely Illuminated: Joyce’s Walter Benjamin
- Chapter 6 Paris Compounded: Finnegans Wake
- Afterword
- Index
Summary
The third chapter, “Paris Digested,” shows how Joyce extends this singular exchange into the sentient thinking of the Ulyssean stream of consciousness by drawing on the interior monologue form pioneered by the post-Symbolist Edouard Dujardin in Les Lauriers sont coupés. Initiated into an embodied aesthetic practice through Molly’s sharing of the seedcake on Howth Head, Bloom models a permeable digestive being who traverses the binaries of aggression and the predatory structures in which he finds himself in “Lestrygonians.” This embodied aesthetic practice guides Bloom’s informal commentary on neoclassical aesthetics in his reflections on Greek statues and excretion at the counter of a public house.
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- James Joyce and the Matter of Paris , pp. 98 - 127Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019