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James Joyce and Cultural Genetics: The Joycean Genome
By (Author) Dr Wim Van Mierlo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
24th April 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Paperback
248
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
As a genetic study, this book uncovers the creative DNA of James Joyces oeuvre by looking at the cultural forces that shaped him and that he in turn shaped in the creation of his books, developing a two-way relationship with history, memory and national identity. Following his development as an author, it revisits and redirects Joyces attitudes towards the Irish Revival. From Chamber Music, through Ulysses to Finnegans Wake Joyce sought to define a cultural identity that went, in many respects, against the mainstream, but that nonetheless belonged to the wider Revivalist project with which it shared certain characteristics and aspirations. Joyces historical and genealogical imagination is read through a careful investigation of the cultural materials that went into his work. Based on evidence from his personal library and the extensive archive of reading notes, ideas, sketches and drafts, this book investigates how Joyce used, absorbed and repurposed these materials creatively in his writing; it does so by bringing for the first time the methods of genetic criticism into the domain of cultural memory and the sociology of the text. Thus this books defines cultural genetics as an exploration of the textual material that are Joyces sources interacts with the culture that produced and received them.
In this ground-breaking study of the notebooks and manuscripts, Wim Van Mierlo demonstrates how Joyces authorship can be understood against the background of the Irish Revival; in the process he sheds new light on the genesis of Joyces major works. * Geert Lernout, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of Antwerp *
Wim Van Mierlo undertakes to combine cultural criticism with genetic criticism, potentially opening new dimensions in the Joycean field. * Daniel Ferrer, Institut des Textes et Manuscrits Modernes, France *
Wim Van Mierlo is a Senior Lecturer in English at Loughborough University and an expert on literary archives, textual scholarship and scholarly editing, and the work of James Joyce and W. B. Yeats. He is currently President of the European Society for Textual Scholarship and a member of the Advisory Board of the James Joyce Quarterly.