Doubtful points : Joyce and punctuation

Author(s)

    • Bonapfel, Elizabeth M.
    • Conley, Tim

Bibliographic Information

Doubtful points : Joyce and punctuation

edited by Elizabeth M. Bonapfel and Tim Conley

(European Joyce studies, 23)

Rodopi, 2014

Available at  / 5 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

As unusual or esoteric as the subject might seem, Joyce's punctuation offers a way to study and appreciate his stylistic innovations and the materiality of his textual productions. Joyce's shunning of what he called "perverted commas" and the general absence of punctuation in Molly Bloom's monologue are only the most infamous instances of a deeply idiosyncratic and changeable use of punctuation. The essays collected in Doubtful Points: Joyce and Punctuation investigate ellipses, parentheses, commas, dashes, colons, semi-colons, full stops, and even diacritics to explore a surprising array of contingent subjects: Joyce's working relationships with publishers; questions of editing and translation; hermeneutic and epistemological dilemmas and reading strategies; linguistic nationalisms; the ideological effects of regulated writing; and more. This book is sure to edify and intrigue "fullstoppers" and "semicolonials" alike.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations "Introduction", Elizabeth M. Bonapfel & Tim Conley "Errant Commas and Stray Parentheses", Fritz Senn "Espacement, the final frontier", Sam Slote "In Between the Sheets: Sexy Punctuation in American Magazines", Amanda Sigler "Marking Realism in Dubliners", Elizabeth M. Bonapfel "The Poetics of the Unsaid: Joyce's Use of Ellipsis between Meaning and Suspension", Annalisa Volpone "'By Dot and Dash System': Punctuation and the Void in 'Ithaca'", Teresa Prudente "'(hic sunt lennones!)': Reading and Misreading the Wake's 'Signs of Suspicion'", Paul Fagan "Fullstoppers and Fools Tops: The "Compunction" of Punctuation and Geometry in Finnegans Wake", Federico Sabatin "Diacritic Aspirations and Servile Letters: Alphabets and National Identities in Joyce's Europe", Tekla Mecsnober "Punctuated Equilibria and the Exdented Dash", Erik Bindervoet & Robbert-Jan Henkes "'Tuck in your blank!': Antiaposiopetic Joyce", Tim Conley List of Contributors

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

  • NCID
    BB17093346
  • ISBN
    • 9789042039018
  • Country Code
    ne
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Amsterdam
  • Pages/Volumes
    213 p.
  • Size
    23 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
Page Top