History, Memory, and Relationships with the Past in James Joyces Ulysses
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literature
book review
date published 15/04/2008
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The past can be a daunting thing. From personal memory to history at large, the past has the power to bury those unable to establish a healthy relationship with it. One can easily become trapped paralyzed in the past through guilt, regret, or nostalgia, emotions generated based upon socially-constructed ideological frameworks of absolutes. James Joyce's novel, Ulysses, represents an ideal relationship with the past in its narrative, its structure, and its form, a relationship in which history acts as a base from which to build a future. By presenting the paralyzing dangers of becoming trapped in history and highlighting how one might grow towards the future while maintaining a relationship with the past through the character of Leopold Bloom, his relationship with Stephen Dedalus, and the experimental, multi-styled form of the novel itself, Ulysses combines numerous elements which add up to something radically new, but something deeply grounded in the work and history of the past.
- The novel opens on Stephen Dedalus, protagonist of Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.
- The novel of Ulysses goes to great lengths to portray absolute value systems.
- The novel also looks down upon a complete ignorance of the past and a lack of any sort of regret.
- Besides his strong relationship with the past, Bloom is also an extremely forward-thinking individual.
- More than just the narrative of Ulysses , however, presents this ideal relationship with the past.
- Joyce wrote and came of age in the time of the Irish Literary Revival.
