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James Joyce's Ulysses & Homer's Odyssey Penelope, Leopold Bloom
(Joyce, James; Homer (not Simpson))

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James Joyce's novel that helped pioneer the stream of consciousness technique that was later used to dramatic effect by American author Jon dos Pasos in his novel USA (which developed the technique into cameras' eye narration and other disciplines of disembodied and contorted forms), is patterned on Homers book The Odyssey. Joyce's 2nd protagonist, Leoplold Bloom is an incarnation of Odysseus and the idea of the book is that everything is recurring. The episodes of the book can be patterned after chapters from The Odyssey. For example: in the final chapter of Ulysses, (which corresponds to Homer's conclusion, which features Penelope reconciled with her returned husband), Molly is reunited with Leoplod. The word 'yes' resounds in the chapter. Though the chapter is 20-30 pages long, there are only 30 or 40 centences or so they run on excessively so as to give the idea that there is simply a single thought or current of thought that runs on, and though the language, much different from this sentence, still it runs on and disassociates in a way less coherent then the sentence that this is similarly, this sentence is to the writing in the final chapter of James Joyce's Ulysses, that is, with very few periods, and much run on sentences, designed to dissolve the idea of a conscious, narrating presence. www.valiantdeath.com ---- for wonderful experimental music/ art/ zines



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