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The Beauty of Finnegans Wake . Remembering and Re‐Imagining: A Return to the Father
Author(s) -
Adams Mary
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
british journal of psychotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.442
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 1752-0118
pISSN - 0265-9883
DOI - 10.1111/bjp.12379
Subject(s) - beauty , poetry , grief , parallels , psychoanalysis , dream , psychology , literature , art , aesthetics , mechanical engineering , neuroscience , engineering , psychotherapist
The author considers James Joyce's immersion in Finnegans Wake as his way of controlling his imagination and holding together emotionally. Asensitive, bright and impressionable child, he had much to contend with, including being a ‘replacement child’, born into his parents’ grief at losing other children. This can create lasting guilt and confusion in the surviving child: do they have the right to an existence of their own. Orshould they, like Joyce, go into exile? The author describes the fearsthat plagued Joyce and how a proleptic imagination, and his phenomenal memory, gave him a sense of control. Placing Finnegans Wake in a timeless dream world gave Joyce space, but within a carefully boundaried structure. Joyce's love affair with language has him playfully crafting his own elaborate Book of Kells, in which punning and parody distract from the grief which underlies the work. At the centre is a Dublin family in a story which loosely parallels Sophocles’ Oedipus, playing out the internal world of the ‘replacement child’ who fears he was responsible for the siblings' deaths. The beauty of Finnegans Wake is the extraordinary way that Joyce stays afloat, producing a unique masterpiece of levity and poetry.

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