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Gottfried, Roy.
Joyce's Iritis and the Irritated Text: The Dis-lexic Ulysses(Florida James Joyce)
University Press of Florida, 1995. The Florida James Joyce Series. First printing. 0813014042  208 pages.
Volume is bound in cream cloth, with stamped gilt lettering to spine and front cover.  Book is in excellent condition.
"Ulysses" was written and proofread when James Joyce's vision was seriously blurred and impaired by iritis. The illness required him to use a magnifying glass to enlarge words, separating them out of context and distorting the simple letters in them. This book considers the effects of Joyce's iritis on the text of "Ulysses". Gottfried examines "Ulysses" much as Joyce must have tried to see it, in close readings of many small portions of the text, and with a quizzical eye. He locates the particular density and opacity of "Ulysses" in two sites: within the iritis in Joyce's eyes and within the body of the text with its irritated confusion of letters. "No reader's eye can be trusted in seeing "Ulysses"", Gottfried claims. Instead, the reader is disoriented and infected with a particular kind of "Joycean dis-lexia", so that "a variety of instabilities arise from the reader's unclear view and reading of the novel". (Publisher's blurb) This work was awarded the 1995 Samla Book Award.
 

Joyce's Iritis and the Irritated Text

$60.00Price
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