`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

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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