Description
A student-friendly guide enabling the new reader of Ulysses to understand, analyse and appreciate the most famous, and famously 'difficult', novel of the twentieth century.
About the Author
Sean Sheehan has taught in London and is now a full-time writer. He has written a number of guides, including ones to Gerard Manley Hopkins and Tony Harrison (both Greenwich Exchange). His Jack's World: the life and times of an Irish farmer, was published in 2007 (Cork University Press).
Reviews
'In the canon of twentieth-century literature, Joyce's work is unignorable, but daunting to many. This fresh, lively, lucid introduction to Ulysses is admirably aware of the critical literature, particularly recent postcolonial and historical approaches, and is equipped with a helpful apparatus for beginners.' - Andrew Gibson, Research Professor of Modern Literature and Theory, Royal Holloway, University of London, and former Segal Professor of Irish Literature at Northwestern University, USA
"Sheehan continues his guides to anglophone literature by parsing the novel considered by many to be one of the more difficult canonical works by Irish writer James Joyce (1882-1941). He places the writing of it within the political and social context of the time, showing how distinct passages, with their plurality of voices, reflect particular events in the non-fiction world. He covers contexts; language, style, and form; reading Ulysses; critical reception and publishing history; and adaptation, interpretation, and influence." -Eithne O'Leyne, BOOK NEWS, Inc.
Sean Sheehan's clearly written Joyce's 'Ulysses' adopts a sensible approach: he provides some biographical details about Joyce, before devoting the main body of the book to a chapter-by-chapter examination of the plot and stylistic aspects of Ulysses. -- Forum for Modern Language Studies Vol. 47, No. 3
Book Information
ISBN 9781847065186
Author Sean Sheehan
Format Hardback
Page Count 144
Imprint Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC