The Light of Which It Speaks

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERARY REVIEWS
H. Palmer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article is a transcript of the third session of a reading group on James Joyce’s Ulysses run by the five lizards who guard the grave of Joyce in Zürich. The third chapter of Ulysses is “Proteus,” in which the character Stephen Daedalus strides across Sandymount Strand meditating upon the “ineluctable modality of the visible” and his own variegated processes of perception as he takes in the sea and the beach. Each lizard articulates a different perspective on sensory perception and a different modality of reading directed by that perspective, and so the lizards cannot agree on what the focus of their discussion should be. As the lizards become more creatively inspired, several other characters appear and add their own perspective, and through the liveliness of conversation and the difference of voices there emerges a kind of “chameleonics” in which multicolored light is projected from within the bodies of each lizard. The mobilization of creativity in this discussion aims to open out the “ineluctable modality of the visible” occurring in the first sentence of Joyce’s chapter into a sensory manifold that both plays and is played by the voices of the meteorological forces themselves that render the seascape protean.
它所说的光
这篇文章是詹姆斯·乔伊斯的《尤利西斯》读书会第三次会议的文字记录,读书会是由看守乔伊斯墓的五只蜥蜴组织的。《尤利西斯》的第三章是“普罗透斯”,其中人物斯蒂芬·代达罗斯大步穿过山山河,沉思着“可见的不可避免的形态”,以及他自己在大海和海滩上的各种感知过程。每只蜥蜴在感官知觉上都有不同的观点,在这种观点的指导下,它们的阅读方式也不同,所以蜥蜴们在讨论的焦点上不能达成一致。随着蜥蜴的创作灵感越来越多,其他几个角色也出现了,并加入了他们自己的观点,通过生动的对话和不同的声音,出现了一种“变色龙”,从每只蜥蜴的身体里投射出多种颜色的光。在这一讨论中调动创造力的目的是打开“可见的不可避免的形态”,出现在乔伊斯章节的第一句话中,进入一种感官的多样性,这种多样性既发挥又被气象力量本身的声音所发挥,这些声音使海景变得千变万化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
MINNESOTA REVIEW
MINNESOTA REVIEW LITERARY REVIEWS-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
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