Corpsey
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It's this versionWho does the annotations @Corpsey? Do you think it’s having any effect on you. Are you learning anything or is just about it being an impressive feat, to write and to have read
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I'm constantly wrestling with my feelings re: the annotations tbh. Without them I think great swathes of it would be completely incomprehensible.
But then, I also think that Joyce can't possibly have expected most people who read it to understand it—unless they were conversant with Irish history, with Dublin circa 1904, had recently read 'Dubliners' and 'A Portrait', could speak/read several languages, etc etc.
I also notice, when I'm going sans annotations, that a lot of times there'll be something incomprehensible which either you suddenly twig onto or he outright 'solves' for you a few paragraphs or pages later. And there's a lot of satisfaction in that. Whereas with annotations, you'll know straight away that e.g. Mermaids was a popular type of tobacco.
I've tried various set ups — reading it from the kindle and flitting back and forth from notes to text, reading it from the book with the annotations ready to read on a kindle/laptop nearby, and reading it from the book without any notes whatsoever.
The upside of reading notes is that it makes you study the text and so I'm noticing a lot of parallels (e.g.) I think I'd completely miss otherwise. The downside is that you're studying stuff sometimes when you should just be letting it flow through you.
Now up to 'Cyclops', having finished 'Sirens' last night in a single session. It's consuming my evenings, my thoughts and perceptions. It feels like a slog at times, it's definitely not something I could read in a week or fortnight. I'm 21 days in and I've read less than half of it.
But it's worth it. It's absolutely miraculous. I think if it was just about Joyce being clever it wouldn't be worth it, as impressive as it is as a technical feat. But it's also a very kind, compassionate, funny book. I keep thinking about how much of a cunt Eliot was compared to Joyce. (Genius though he was.)