Bonus Episode - Biblical Echoes in James Joyce. (Ulysses and Finnegans Wake)
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This is a full version of the podcast episode issued as part of by report and reaction to the James Joyce Centenary exhibition released on Soundcloud on the 25th November 2022.
Click on the link at the bottom to listen to the Sound scape I created and entered into the Irish Tourist Board's background soundscapes to be used at "The Properties of Water Installation", during the festival. It was shortlisted for consideration but not used.
Study Notes:
- James Joyce and Religion: Despite rejecting institutional Catholicism, Joyce’s works remain steeped in biblical allusions and theological discourse.
- Key Theological Themes:
- Leopold Bloom as a Christ-like Figure: Displays kindness and mercy; parallels the Good Samaritan; suffers ridicule.
- Stephen Dedalus as the Prodigal Son: Rejects traditional faith but remains haunted by religious guilt.
- Eucharistic Imagery: Themes of sacramental participation, consumption, and the Last Supper are subverted and interrogated.
- Resurrection Motif: The narrative structure of Ulysses suggests renewal and restoration despite its modernist ambiguity.
- Joyce’s Language and the Bible:
- Ulysses employs a Babel-like linguistic multiplicity, blending scriptural and secular voices.
- The Bible serves as both a literary device and a cultural foundation for Joyce’s exploration of human destiny.
- Joyce’s Vision of History:
- The novel suggests a break from cyclical religious traditions towards a transformative, apocalyptic understanding of Christian history.
- Modernist Challenges to Faith:
- Joyce questions religious dogma while recognizing the Bible’s narrative power.
- His work reflects a broader modernist skepticism towards objective truth and divine revelation.
- Implications for Christian Readers:
- Ulysses invites both critique and engagement from a biblical perspective.
- The novel resists clear moral conclusions, reflecting modernist uncertainties about faith and meaning.
Part Two Joyce’s Finnegans Wake and Biblical Themes
1. Creation Ex Nihilo and the Cyclical Nature of History
- Finnegans Wake reflects the biblical idea of creation out of nothing, presenting history as a continuous cycle of rise and fall.
- The novel enfolds all human history into a single, ever-repeating narrative of civilization and the cosmos.
2. The Fall and The Christian Epic
- The book begins with a fall, recalling:
- The fall of Satan (Isaiah 14:12).
- The fall of Adam and Eve in Genesis.
- The Tower of Babel and its linguistic fragmentation (Genesis 11:1-9).
- Joyce’s vision is not just allegorical but an attempt to unify history into a single, converging reality.
3. The Sacrificial Death of God and the Eucharist
- Joyce depicts Christ’s sacrifice as an ong
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