''I Know That I Have Broken Every Heart'': The Significance of the Irish Language in 'Finnegans Wake' and in Other Works of James Joyce

Author:   Diarmuid Curraoin
Publisher:   Academica Press
ISBN:  

9781936320790


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   15 December 2013
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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''I Know That I Have Broken Every Heart'': The Significance of the Irish Language in 'Finnegans Wake' and in Other Works of James Joyce


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Overview

The central theme of this monograph is James Joyce's employment of the Irish language in Finnegans Wake, the virtuosity with which he makes use of the tongue, the understanding of its grammatical and syntactical subtleties which he reveals in the book and ''the explanatory treasure of heart and mind'', as the the author put it himself, which the Gaelic component of the writer's final word on the world provides. Since Finnegans Wake'cannot be viewed in total isolation from the greater Joycean canon, the interconnections between it and Joyce's other writings, both fictional and journalistic, will be examined as will his deployment of other languages, notably his use of that second 'Irish' language Hisperic or Hiberno-Latin. James Joyce's employment of the Irish language in Finnegans Wakeis an area of study upon which little serious scholarly work has been done prior to study, an extraordinary situation when one considers that, firstly, the author declares in the book Irish to be the second language of the Wake and secondly, that there is hardly a page of the novel which does not contain at least one Irish language element, features which range from the simple and obvious to the extremely complex and obtuse. More importantly, in a sense, however, is the fact that it is in Irish in Finnegans Wake that the writer reveals his deepest personal concerns, worries in regard to the illness of his daughter Lucia, the manner in which his lifestyle has impacted upon his wider family, the state in which Ireland finds herself and the way in which he is viewed at home. A complete understanding of James Joyce, author, father, Irishman, cannot be achieved in the absence of a full appreciation of his relationship with the Irish tongue.

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Author:   Diarmuid Curraoin
Publisher:   Academica Press
Imprint:   Academica Press
Weight:   0.421kg
ISBN:  

9781936320790


ISBN 10:   1936320797
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   15 December 2013
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Diarmuid Curraoin, Irish language scholar, National University of Ireland, Sandford Park

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