Joyce, Chaos, And Complexity (1997)

Literary Criticism / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, - Literary Criticism / Semiotics & Theory, - Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / General -

NOT_MATURE -

Thomas Jackson Rice

01/01/1997
Overview
Joyce, Chaos, and Complexity studies the manifold relations among twentieth-century mathematics and Science, James Joyce's fiction, and the critical reception of Joyce's work. Calling for profound reassessments, Thomas Jackson Rice compellingly argues that Joyce's work resists postmodernist approaches of ambiguity: Joyce never abandoned his conviction that reality exists, regardless of the human ability to represent it. Placing Joyce in his cultural context, Rice first provocatively traces the previously unacknowledged formative influence of Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometries on Dubliners and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. He then demonstrates that, when later innovations in science transformed entire worldviews, Joyce recognized conventional literary modes of representation as offering merely arbitrary constructions of this new reality. Joyce responded to these developmeats in Ulysses by experimenting with perspective, embedding design, and affirming the existence of reality. Rice contends that Ulysses is a precursor to the multiple tensions of chaos theory; likewise, chaos theory can serve as a model for understanding Ulysses. In Finnegans Wake Joyce consummates his vision and anticipates the theories of complexity science through a dynamic approximation of reality.
Original Language

English

Buy Print
amazon logo

Buy on amazon

More by Author

Jan 01, 2008
Uses the concept of cannibalism to describe Joyce's incorporation of various literary and cultural a...
Jan 01, 1911
No Description Available
Jan 01, 1997
Joyce, Chaos, and Complexity studies the manifold relations among twentieth-century mathematics and ...
Jan 01, 1966
No Description Available
Jan 01, 1931
No Description Available
Oct 15, 2015
Fyodor Dostoevsky's first novel, Netochka Nezvanova, written in 1849, remains the least studied and ...
Jan 01, 1849
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge ...
Jan 01, 1867
No Description Available

Comments


No Comments Yet
Be the first to share what you think