Joyce and Popular Culture Edited by R. B. Kershner Foreword by Zack Bowen, Series Editor Joyce not only used popular culture, he contributed to it. These essays employ a variety of sophisticated critical techniques to bring out his surprising involvement in the popular culture of his time. Treating all of Joyce's work from Dubliners through Finnegans Wake, they question the conventional idea that popular culture is the inverse of modernist high art, showing instead how popular culture intertwines with modernist (and postmodernist) art. In a general historical introduction, R. B. Kershner the entire question of Joyce and popular culture within the context of Joyce criticism and the cultural studies movement.
THEORETICAL APPROACHES POPULAR SOURCES AND PARADIGMS THE CONTEXT OF CULTURE JOYCE IN POPULAR CULTURE R. B. Kershner is professor of English at the University of Florida and an advisory editor for the James Joyce Quarterly. He is the author of Joyce, Bakhtin and Popular Literature: Chronicles of Disorder (1989) and Dylan Thomas: The Poet and His Critics (1977) and the editor of the St. Martin's Press case studies edition of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1992). The Florida James Joyce Series 1996. 232pp. 6 X 9. 20 illustrations (drawings and photographs), notes, index.
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"Gathers together impressive, prominent voices in the field of Joycean studies and popular culture. . . . I was impressed by the elegance with which I was introduced to the idea that Tom
Swifties, Marilyn Monroe, and electronic media all have something to offer to the study of Joyce (and vice versa). . . . Delightful new materials. . . . All Joyceans will want to own this volume. . . . Those interested in popular culture per se will also have to see what's happening now in the Joycean
arena."--Cheryl Herr, University of Iowa |