Book contents
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in Irish Literature and Culture
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction: A Weak Theory of Transnationalism
- Part I Transnational Genealogies
- Chapter 1 “A World of New Wonders”: Maria Edgeworth’s Atlantic Ecology and the Limits of Transnationalism in the Nineteenth Century
- Chapter 2 “I’m apparently not famous anymore”: Appropriating Dion Boucicault’s Octoroon and Reckoning with Racial Violence in America
- Chapter 3 Destitute Recollection: Joyce’s Indian Translocations
- Chapter 4 “Under the shadow of the Monument”: On First Looking into Finnegans Wake
- Chapter 5 Eironesian Island Others: Irish Islands within Pacific Waters
- Part II Planets
- Part III Missed Translations
- Part IV Transnational Futures
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 4 - “Under the shadow of the Monument”: On First Looking into Finnegans Wake
from Part I - Transnational Genealogies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 November 2024
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in Irish Literature and Culture
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction: A Weak Theory of Transnationalism
- Part I Transnational Genealogies
- Chapter 1 “A World of New Wonders”: Maria Edgeworth’s Atlantic Ecology and the Limits of Transnationalism in the Nineteenth Century
- Chapter 2 “I’m apparently not famous anymore”: Appropriating Dion Boucicault’s Octoroon and Reckoning with Racial Violence in America
- Chapter 3 Destitute Recollection: Joyce’s Indian Translocations
- Chapter 4 “Under the shadow of the Monument”: On First Looking into Finnegans Wake
- Chapter 5 Eironesian Island Others: Irish Islands within Pacific Waters
- Part II Planets
- Part III Missed Translations
- Part IV Transnational Futures
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Focusing on the author’s first encounters with Finnegans Wake, this chapter reexamines the distinction between what is supposedly “intrinsic” and what is “extrinsic” to the experience of reading. The context in this case was not simply apartheid South Africa in the mid-1980s. More directly relevant, at least for one initiate into the mysteries and global effects of the Wake, was the looming presence of the 1820s Settler Monument in Grahamstown, now Makhanda, a center for the arts inaugurated in 1974 and designed to commemorate British settler traditions and celebrate the English language. Joyce’s last and most eccentric foray into literary writing, it turns out, constitutes a powerful refutation of the monument’s founding assumptions and of the act of monumentalization itself.
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- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture , pp. 82 - 98Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024