Joyce's Revenge
History, Politics, and Aesthetics in Ulysses
Andrew Gibson
Reviews and Awards
"This thought-provoking study makes a significant and highly original contribution to scholarship on Ulysses.... A particular strength of this book is the way in which it seeks to interpret the aesthetic of Ulysses as a whole, rather than focusing on a few key features or episodes."--Times Literary Supplement
"Joyce's Revenge makes a significant and distinctive contribution to Joyce studies, and it deserves a wide readership.... The author is impressively well read in English and Irish cultural history, and the book identifies and explores an aspect of this history about which most Joyceans, perhaps, know less than they might.... The sheer number of distinct contexts that Gibson has developed for Ulysses, all subsumed by the controlling theme of English nationalism, is extremely impressive. Among the books on Joyce I've studied recently this is perhaps the most absorbing 'read,' cover to cover, of all of them.... This book--certainly individual chapters of this book--will probably be reread much more frequently than most recent books on Joyce."--Timothy Martin, James Joyce Literary Supplement
"[A] thoroughly researched and documented study.... The consequence of this unique contribution to Joyce studies (and to English literary studies more broadly) cannot be overstated.... The book signifies an important contribution to Joyce scholarship, to post-colonial (or semi-colonial) studies, and to cultural-historical assessments of English literature. In reading Joyce's Revenge, one embarks on a rich journey into cultural history, previous scholarship, and the delightful density of the text itself. Gibson presents contextual material in an engaging manner, transforming sometimes familiar ground into provocative new readings of Joyce's aesthetic, Irish politics, and the force of English cultural nationalism."--English Literature in Transition 1880-1920
"Gibson's historical research is scrupulous and his explanation of Ulysses as a 'semi-colonial' text usefully extends the postcolonial theorizing of Joyce begun by Vincent Cheng, Seamus Deane, and others."--Choice
"Gibson deftly combines many of these threads--notably Nationalism, colonialism, and cultural commodity--in subtle readings to offer some new understanding of Joyce's liberation from these issues as what constitutes revenge."--Clio