`Eumaeus': Literally the Antepenultimate Episode
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Slote, Sam. ""Eumaeus": Literally the Antepenultimate Episode." Joyce Studies Annual, vol. 2022 no. 1, 2022, p. 319-337
Abstract
Of the various threads woven into the definitions of Modernism, one is the
element of style. One can trace this emphasis on style back to Flaubert’s
famous claim, from a letter from January 1852, apropos Madame Bovary:
“What I’d like to do is write a book about nothing, a book dependent on
nothing external, which would be held together by the internal strength of
its style [. . .] a book which would have almost no subject, or at least a
subject that is nearly invisible.” 1 Flaubert’s hypothesized work is one that is
about nothing other than itself, its manner, its craftmanship. In his eloquent
survey of the evolution of Modernism’s preoccupation with style, Ben
Hutchinson writes: “Time and again the reification of style threatens to
reduce modernity to a mere pretext for hermetic, ‘pure’ aestheticism.” 2
Taking this critique of Modernism to a self-promotional extreme was the
Brazilian novelist Paulo Coelho, who in 2012 claimed to much international
press coverage that Joyce’s emphasis on style was deleterious to literature:
“There is nothing there. If you dissect Ulysses, it gives you a tweet. [. . .] I am
modern because I make the difficult seem easy, and so I can communicate
with the world.”3 Amid the exuberance of style, there is no substance, just a
subject that is, at most, almost invisible, with merely 140 or so characters.
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Author's Homepage: http://people.tcd.ie/slotes
Type of material: Journal Article

