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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... live in an ideal future of unlimited resources . He lives for imaginary fulfillment . If the miser fetishizes the first stage , the spendthrift makes the second stage an end in itself : he wishes to spend money but cares little about ...
... live in the present , unconscionably it may be , but desper- ately . Better debts than battening upon past and future ... lives on borrowed time . Yet Ellmann is correct in suggesting that Stephen's debts cannot be ascribed simply to ...
... lives of his Dubliners ; closer scrutiny reveals even more plainly how those lives are mastered by the institutions that control the power and money and by Dubliners ' acquiescence to that power . THE BLOOD OF “ WANDERING ROCKS ...