The economy of Ulysses : making both ends meet

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

The economy of Ulysses : making both ends meet

Mark Osteen

Syracuse University Press, 1995

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p.451-464) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780815626534

Description

This work reads "Ulysses" from a number of different economic perspectives as it also moves toward an analysis of the role of the reader in the "economics" of interpreting Joyce's novel.
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780815626619

Description

This original and wide-ranging study explores the "economies" of Ulysses using a number of different critical and theoretical methods. Not only do the economic circumstances of the characters form a significant part of the novel's realistic subject matter but the relationships between characters are also based upon modes of economic exchange. Moreover, the narrative itself is filled with economic terms that serve as tropes for its themes, events, and techniques. Some of the subjects and topics covered include Joyce's own "spendthrift" background, gift exchanges and reciprocity as a fundamental means of reader/author relationship in the novel, money and language, Bloom as an "economic man," the "narrative economy" of "Wandering Rocks," the relationship between commerce and eroticism, the function of sacrifice in the creation of value, counterfeiting, forgery, and other crimes of writing, and a demonstration of how the encounter between Stephen and Bloom "makes both ends meet." The book brings together not only the opposed economic impulses in Joyce but also the conflicting strains of regulation and excess in the novel's structural economy.

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