Nels Pearson
- Published in print:
- 2015
- Published Online:
- May 2015
- ISBN:
- 9780813060521
- eISBN:
- 9780813050690
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- University Press of Florida
- DOI:
- 10.5744/florida/9780813060521.003.0002
- Subject:
- Literature, 20th-century Literature and Modernism
Postcolonial readings of Ulysses often focused on national identity, but the novel is equally concerned with Ireland’s challenged internationalism. In many ways, Ulysses exposes the economic and ...
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Postcolonial readings of Ulysses often focused on national identity, but the novel is equally concerned with Ireland’s challenged internationalism. In many ways, Ulysses exposes the economic and political mechanisms which have conspired to postpone Ireland’s reciprocal engagement in the European interstate system. In Joyce’s Dublin, what Frantz Fanon called “international consciousness” is always preempted by a “national consciousness” which, although presumed to be its prerequisite, cannot be separately achieved. The chapter supports these claims through analysis of Joyce’s thematic incorporation of ports, waterways, and maritime trade, then moves on to speculate that Joyce’s modernism is itself a product of Ireland’s deferred sovereignty. It situates these observations in the context of arguments by Pheng Cheah and Tim Brennan regarding the ways in which the opposing discourses of nationalism and cosmopolitanism obscure the pragmatic challenges of sustainable internationalism and egalitarian statehood in the developing world.Less
Postcolonial readings of Ulysses often focused on national identity, but the novel is equally concerned with Ireland’s challenged internationalism. In many ways, Ulysses exposes the economic and political mechanisms which have conspired to postpone Ireland’s reciprocal engagement in the European interstate system. In Joyce’s Dublin, what Frantz Fanon called “international consciousness” is always preempted by a “national consciousness” which, although presumed to be its prerequisite, cannot be separately achieved. The chapter supports these claims through analysis of Joyce’s thematic incorporation of ports, waterways, and maritime trade, then moves on to speculate that Joyce’s modernism is itself a product of Ireland’s deferred sovereignty. It situates these observations in the context of arguments by Pheng Cheah and Tim Brennan regarding the ways in which the opposing discourses of nationalism and cosmopolitanism obscure the pragmatic challenges of sustainable internationalism and egalitarian statehood in the developing world.