The Economy of Ulysses: Making Both Ends MeetSyracuse University Press, 1995 - 472 ページ This original and wide-ranging study explores the "economies" of Ulysses using a number of different critical and theoretical methods. Not only do the economic circumstances of the characters Some of the subjects and topics covered include Joyce's own "spendthrift" background, gift exchanges and reciprocity as a fundamental means of reader/author relationship in the novel, money and language, Bloom as an "economic man," the "narrative economy" of "Wandering Rocks," the relationship between commerce and eroticism, the function of sacrifice in the creation of value, counterfeiting, forgery, and other crimes of writing, and a demonstration of how the |
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... fact that one - fourth of the city council consisted of publi- cans and wine merchants may help to explain the local government's passivity with regard to temperance ( O'Brien 1982 , 80 ) . But if the truly destitute had no money to buy ...
... fact of social life , intertextuality is a fact of literary life ; Stephen's recognition of both kinds of debtorship is a necessary first step to a renewed accep- tance of materiality that will reattach him to history . His poem ...
... fact of intertextual debtorship , how does one avoid sentimentalism ? By foregrounding those loans , by giving explicit credit , as Joyce and Stephen do in " Scylla and Charybdis " : its discussion of intertextual debts to Shakespeare ...