Reading: Ulysses

This page will serve as a link to hypertextual, annotated or analytic readings of Ulysses.

 

Debra Auspitz: A hypertexting of "Penelope" (18:1122-1148), "O patience above its pouring out of me like the sea. . . ."

David Gilberg: A close reading of the "colossal and healthy urination" in Ithaca (17:1182-1213).

Aidan Finley: A hypertexting of "Oxen of the Sun" (14:1440-1471): "All off for a buster, armstrong, hollering down the street. Bonafides."

Zach Hall : A close critical reading of the appearance of Rudy in Circe (1497).

Nick Johnson: A hyptertexted comparison of the two readings of Howth Hill, "Lestrygonians" (8:896) "Stuck on the pane two flies buzzed, stuck" and "Penelope" (18:1578) "And the sun shines for you today. . . ."

Avi Korine : A hypertexting of "Penelope" (18:1198-1228) "I suppose there isnt in all creation another man with the habits he has. . . "

Alison Kosakowski: A hypertexting of "Penelope", focusing on religion, sexuality and the fetishizing of commodities.

Kilian Kroell: A hyptertexting of "Lestragonians" (8:737-765) or "Bloom's Vegetarian Moment": "I'll take a glass of burgundy. . . ."

Lauren LeBlanc : A close reading of an early description of Gerty in "Nausicaa" (13:188-217), "Her very soul is in her eyes. . . ."

Matt Osypowski : A hypertexting of "Cyclops" (12:1467-1492) "And I belong to a race too, says Bloom, that is hated and persecuted."

Jim Soland : A hypertexting of the Yeats/Joyce relation, "Who Goes with Fergus?" The Transfiguration of Yeats in Ulysses".

Katherine Steele : A close critical reading of the problematic image of the Virgin Mary in "Nausicaa" (13:281-302) "And then there came out upon the air the sound of voices and the pealing anthem of the organ."

Kate Topper: A close reading of the opening lines of "Proteus" (3:1-24), "Ineluctable modality of the visible. . . ."

Nick White: A close reading of the corruption of the injunction, "Elijah is coming," "Lestrygonians" (8:10-14)

Stephen Yeager: A close reading of "Scylla and Charybdis" (9:828-845): "A father, Stephen said, battling against hopelessness, is a necessary evil."

 


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