Showing posts with label James Joyce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Joyce. Show all posts

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Orlando by Virginia Woolf



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In a graduate class on Victorian Literature at Baylor, we read most of Woolf’s works.  I had come to the class having only read Mrs. Dalloway, which I greatly enjoyed.  Orlando immediately became another favorite of her novels.  On October 5, 1927, Virginia Woolf began writing a story she had worked through her mind for months.  Now Woolf, an early modernist influenced by James Joyce, is most certainly an acquired taste.  The novel, Orlando, is, as she wrote, a fictional “biography beginning in the year 1500 & continuing until the present day” (Nissley, A Reader’s Book of Days 316).  I decided to revisit this unusual novel, but a rather peculiar thing happened to me.  I found the story a tough read, and as the novel progressed, I found it harder and harder to continue.  For once a novel did not stay with me, and I can say I did not enjoy the read at all.

The story begins with Orlando, a handsome young man, heir of titles and lands dating back to William the Conqueror.  He becomes a favorite of Queen Bess.  As Woolf writes, “For the old woman loved him.  And the Queen, who knew a man when she saw one, though not, it is said, in the usual way, plotted for him a splendid ambitious career.  Lands were given him, houses assigned him.  He was to be the son of her old age; the limb of her infirmity; the oak tree on which she leant her degradation.  She croaked out these promises and strange domineering tendernesses (they were at Richmond now) sitting bolt upright in her stiff brocades by the fire which, however high they piled it, never kept her warm” (9).

Woolf, an ardent feminist, details the habits and peculiarities of men, and then turns her attentions to the onerous life of women with all the strictures placed upon them in regard to marriage, ownership of property, and public, as well as private, activities.  She also comments on Elizabethan, Enlightenment, Victorian, and 20th century attitudes towards women.

Woolf writes, “crime and poverty had none of the attraction for the Elizabethans that they have for us.  They had none of our modern shame of book learning; none of our belief that to be born the son of a butcher is a blessing and to be unable to read a virtue; no fancy that what we call ‘life’ and ‘reality are somehow connected with ignorance and brutality; nor, indeed any equivalent for these two words at all” (13).  Yes, these lines found themselves on paper in her distinctive purple ink in 1927.

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Orlando constantly struggles with loneliness and isolation concomitant with his position among the nobility.  As he rises to the title of Duke, he begins to detest the hypocrisy of the upper class and the shallow gossip of those who pretend to intellectualism.  Orlando befriends, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison, and John Dryden and attends gatherings with Swift, Johnson, and Boswell.  Finally, an invitation is extended to Pope and Addison, and they have tea and conversations worthy of those eminent men.

Half way through Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, the well-foxed old paperback began to fall apart, as if trying to end the chore I had set for myself.  But I have ordered a new copy, with annotations, and I will try again soon.  So, I find myself perplexed.  Do I dare reread Mrs. Dalloway?  I think not.  I will hold that one in my memory.  From 1995 or thereabouts, 5 stars

--Chiron, 9/14/14

Friday, September 19, 2014

The Sixteenth of June by Maya Lang



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Ever since I read James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man in high school, the Irish author has fascinated me to no end.  Much of my graduate work focused on Joyce.  When I heard of a novel loosely based on Joyce’s great work, Ulysses, I could not move faster to order and read the novel, The Sixteenth of June by Maya Lang.  As a bonus, she set the story in Philadelphia.  All kinds of landmarks figure into the story, as they do in the Dublin of Ulysses.  Those who enjoy puzzles and word games will find this a pleasant and worthwhile read.

The only drawback to the novel lies in the complicated family relationships, which I found hard to keep straight.  I tried making a family tree, but gave up.  Maya Lang’s website contains a list of sentences and paraphrased sentences, drawn from Ulysses.  Great fun ferreting those out.

Lang’s prose ranks close to Joyce’s style.  In Ulysses, every page is a puzzle, every character described in great detail.  Lang’s characters also share names with the characters in Ulysses: Leopold and Stephen, and Nora – Joyce’s wife. 

Lang’s Stephen is an English Professor, as is Joyce’s.  Lang writes, “They continued talking, their discussion lightening as the sky grew dark.  He told her about teaching, that sea of alien faces smirking at him.  How they fidgeted, turning in papers that were a collective atrocity.  And this is an Ivy League school!  Next he was going on about his committee, the fatiguing levels of [butt]-kissing its members required.  He felt as if he were getting a degree in babysitting, in appeasement, in coddling.  ‘Stephen, don’t you have office hours?’ she interrupted, glancing at the clock.  ‘No one ever comes anyway,’ he replied hastily, reaching for a cookie.  He thought he saw a momentary gleam in her eye, but she said nothing, her head bobbing away” (29).

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Numerous references to places I know and love abound in the novel: Rittenhouse Square, Spruce Street, Delancey Place, Chestnut Hill, Wawa – a deli/convenience store with great sandwiches, and my neighborhood, Fishtown.  She even takes a jab at a Philly accent, when Nora asks if Stephen wants a drink.  “She pronounced coffee as if it had a w. Cawfee” (109). 

The characters spend a lot of time in their heads, for example, Lang writes, “Nora wonders if they aren’t so different from Ulysses.  She had attempted to read it before her first Bloomsday party.  ‘How do you people get through this thing?’ she asked Stephen.  ‘They don’t,’ he replied.  ‘That’s its claim to fame’”  (88).

In one scene, Lang writes, “…Stephen clacking away on his beloved typewriter.  16 June 2014” (121). Of course June 16th is Bloomsday, the date Ulysses is set.  So those were fun, and kept me reading, but I think I will read this again in a little while and see if deserves more than 4 stars.

--Chiron, 8/21/14