Book contents
- The New Joyce Studies
- Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
- The New Joyce Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Scope
- Chapter 1 The Transcripts of (Post)Colonial Modernity in Ulysses and Accra
- Chapter 2 Joyce and Race in the Twenty-First Century
- Chapter 3 Dubliners and French Naturalism
- Chapter 4 Joyce and Latin American Literature Minor Transnationalism and Modernist Form
- Chapter 5 The Multiplications of Translation
- Chapter 6 The Joycean Public Domain and the Shape of Freedom
- Chapter 7 Ulysses in the World
- Part II Fragment and Frame
- Part III Perspective
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 1 - The Transcripts of (Post)Colonial Modernity in Ulysses and Accra
from Part I - Scope
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 September 2022
- The New Joyce Studies
- Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
- The New Joyce Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Scope
- Chapter 1 The Transcripts of (Post)Colonial Modernity in Ulysses and Accra
- Chapter 2 Joyce and Race in the Twenty-First Century
- Chapter 3 Dubliners and French Naturalism
- Chapter 4 Joyce and Latin American Literature Minor Transnationalism and Modernist Form
- Chapter 5 The Multiplications of Translation
- Chapter 6 The Joycean Public Domain and the Shape of Freedom
- Chapter 7 Ulysses in the World
- Part II Fragment and Frame
- Part III Perspective
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Quayson’s chapter compares the Dublin of Joyce’s Ulysses in 1904 with the real-life multilingual city of Accra, Ghana. In these twentieth- and twenty-first-century contexts, Quayson finds different forms of epic dreaming and material work. From among these celebrations of the kinetic aspects of urban life, he focuses on advertising billboards and personal slogans and pronouncements, arguing that these slogans and Joyce’s interior linguistic landscape in Ulysses exemplify what Deleuze and Guattari have described as the deterritorialization of language. Quayson draws on these theorists to offer a new way of understanding a central problem of language in Joyce’s writing – the self-interlocution and the relations between external stimuli and internal activities of the mind – and the nature of the Accra streetscape, in which vehicle slogans and inscriptions turn oral discourse into a written text, transforming stigmatized terms of African indigenous languages into co-creative dimensions of English discourse.
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- Information
- The New Joyce Studies , pp. 21 - 34Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022