James Joyce and Censorship: the Trials of Ulysses - Paul Vanderham - Livros - NYU Press - 9780814787908 - 1 de novembro de 1997
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James Joyce and Censorship: the Trials of Ulysses

Paul Vanderham

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James Joyce and Censorship: the Trials of Ulysses

When James Joyce's Ulysses began to appear in installments in 1918, it provoked widespread outrage and disgust. The novel violated a long list of taboos by denigrating English royalty, describing masturbation, and mingling the erotic with the excremental--in a style that some early reviewers called literary bolshevism. As a result, U. S. Postal authorities denied several installments of Ulysses access to the mails, initiating a series of suppressions that would result in a thirteen-year ban on Joyce's novel. Obscenity trials spanned the next decade. Using personal interviews and primary sources never before discussed in depth, James Joyce and Censorship closely examines the legal trials of Ulysses from 1920 to 1934.

Paying particular attention to the decision that lifted the ban on Ulysses in 1933, a decision that the ACLU cites to this day in cases involving censorship, Vanderham traces the growth of the fallacy that literature is incapable of influencing individuals. He argues persuasively that underneath every esthetic lie ethical, political, philosophical, and religious convictions. The legal and the literary aspects of the Ulysses controversy, Vanderham insists, are virtually inseparable. By analyzing the writing and revising of Ulysses in the context of Joyce's lifelong struggle with the censors, he argues that the censorship of Ulysses affected not only the critical reception of the novel but its very shape.

Mídia Livros     Hardcover Book   (Livro com lombada e capa dura)
Lançado 1 de novembro de 1997
ISBN13 9780814787908
Editoras NYU Press
Páginas 242
Dimensões 160 × 240 × 30 mm   ·   544 g
Idioma English  

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