Cover image for States of Desire : Wilde, Yeats, Joyce, and the Irish Experiment.
States of Desire : Wilde, Yeats, Joyce, and the Irish Experiment.
Title:
States of Desire : Wilde, Yeats, Joyce, and the Irish Experiment.
Author:
Mahaffey, Vicki.
ISBN:
9780195353884
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (295 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Abbreviations -- 1. Introduction: Reading and "Irish" Desire -- Reading as "Habit" -- Starting Again: Experimental Reading and Desiring -- Verbal Experimentation in Ireland -- Iconoclasm as De-siring -- A Micropolitics of Experiment -- Fretting Nationalism and Masculinity -- Beyond Radicalism -- Oedipal Desire -- Territorializing and Deterritorializing Desire -- 2. Wilde's Desire: A Study in Green -- A Scary Wildrnan, or Nothing Wilde? -- Flowers of Green: Ireland, Crime, and Youth -- Mature Individualism -- De Profundis: Taming Wilde -- Père-version and Im-mère-sion: Parental Corruption -- A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and the Prohibition of Desire -- Wilde Im-mère-sions of Desire -- 3. "Horrible Splendour of Desire": The Will of W.B.Yeats -- Hanrahan's Passion: Hunt as Flight -- "It Was the Dream Itself Enchanted Me" -- The Rose -- Celtic Rosicrucianism -- A Woman's Rose -- The Secret Rose -- The Wind Among the Reeds -- The Tower and The Winding Stair -- 4. Joyful Desire: Giacomo Joyce and Finnegans Wake -- Joyce's War on Status -- Giacomo Joyce: Joyce and Wunderlich -- Fascism and Silence: The Coded History of Amalia Popper -- From Italy to Ireland: The Ambivalence of Men toward Men -- Female Desire and Power in Finnegans Wake -- Marriage as "Marrage" -- "Male and Female Unmask We Hem" -- Waking Desire -- 5. Conclusion -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- X -- Y -- Z.
Abstract:
This book is an intimate study of the three giants in Irish literary history: Oscar Wilde, William Butler Yeats, and James Joyce. In addition to constructing a narrative of Irelands political and literary past, Vicki Mahaffey interweaves the lives and writing of the authors into a portrait of national imagination, shaped not only by a vast cultural and mythic heritage, but also by the hard fact of English political domination. States of Desire argues that what people desire is fundamentally connected to how they write and read. Not only do language and narrative shape desire (and vice versa), but because these processes are socially conditioned, some political circumstances, such as those present in Ireland at the turn of the century, foster experimental desire more successfully than others. Mahaffey's contribution to the critical discourse on literary modernism is to assign a political motive to the art of modernist wordplay; in doing so, she offers a more compelling and socially driven version of the oft-told tale of literary modernism. Irish writers, she argues, sought to disrupt the rigidity of political thinking and social control by turning language into a weapon; by opening up infinite new possibilities of meaning and association, linguistic play makes it impossible for thought to be monopolized by the state or any other institutional power. In this light, the text becomes a prism of political, cultural, and erotic desires: a fountain of conscious and unconscious linguistic suggestion. Defying semantic control and refuting societal repression, Wilde, Yeats, and Joyce literally fought, in their lives and in their work, for a freedom of expression which--as was painfully evidenced in the case of Wilde--was not to be had for the asking.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: