![]() |
Quote:
Damn it, for all the sh*t that I get around here [mainly from OccultHawk], my website had ~ 3,500 PDF's that people could read and download for free. Books that were hard to find and woth while. |
Quote:
I'm hopeful that this latest read will resonate with me, and if it does perhaps I'll give the mathematical logic of GEB another shot. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
G, E, B: was the first book I recommended to my, now, wife as a deep intro to the way I think. Saying that, I think there are better books by him than ...Strange Loop: Metamagical Themas... and The Mind’s I being two. As for the ...Wake, have you tried joining a reading group that’s devoted to either it, in particular, or Joyce in general? I’ve unfortunately gained a bit of a celebrity status at the monthly F. W. one that I attend here, but surprisingly, we have about 2 dozen people show up each month to read and discuss. |
Quote:
I'm very fortunate to live in Buffalo, NY. Our university is is home to the greatest Joyce collection in the country, including his spectacles, walking stick, first editions of his works, Sylvia Beach’s personally-bound edition of Ulysses, and an exhaustive collection of other manuscripts. I shared to this thread earlier in March when I first beheld the collection and my researched produced an extremely rare university publication that I hope to one day claim and display in my home. Here are the specs: Book oversize - The James Joyce Archive General Editor Michael Groden Finnegans Wake A Facsimile of Buffalo Notebook VI.A (“Six A”) Prefaced and arranged by Danis Rose 1978 Garland Publishing (the roughest and earliest notes for The Wake) ISBN: 0-8240-2827-9 pp256-257 offer color oversized facsimiles of Scribbledehobble My Joyce collection thus far includes A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake, A Gaelic Lexicon for Finnegans Wake, a handsome 1979 Franklin Library edition of Ulysses, the John Hopkins University Press' Annotations to Finnegans Wake, several museum exhibit manuscripts, Joyce himself reading from his works on vinyl, and most proudly, a mint framed copy of the 1939 issue of Time Magazine featuring Joyce on the cover and his final interview just before his passing. https://i.imgur.com/F7rsAQAl.jpg https://i.imgur.com/PmXDrGSl.jpg I also had the pleasure of being filmed reading The Wake as part of an internationally-touring art exhibit called Finnegans Waves. I've explored Wake reading groups but tragically most of the city's group has retired or passed away due to old age. Attempts to revitalize the group have been less than successful. But I did attend this year's Bloomsday celebration which is chiefly attended by members of The Irish Classical Theatre who faithfully reenact scenes from Ulysses beautifully. It's a fine city. |
Quote:
Buffalo, New York Every two weeks on Tuesday during the academic year from 7:30 to 11:00 or so. Contact Alphonse Kolodziejczak 70 Rollingwood Williamsville, NY 14221-1834 716-568-0808 akolo55@msn.com The Poetry Collection University of Buffalo 716-654-2917 |
Oh cool, this just came in the mail so I guess I'll be diving into Chomsky for the first time in a bit. About ****ing time I guess.
https://s.s-bol.com/imgbase0/imageba...4001762910.jpg |
Quote:
Yes - my understanding is that that was the primary group in Buffalo. I originally found the contact listed at finneganswake.org and inquired about it at the Finnegans Waves art event. I had a cup of tea with a woman there who said she used to frequent the group but that it had since fizzled out. I don't believe the finneganswake.org resource list is actively maintained and current. I'm also friends with a beautiful young woman who is a Joycean scholar who performed many of the archival scans of Joyce's crayon-stricken notebooks and earliest drafts of The Wake as part of her graduate work for the University Poetry Collection. I mentioned my interest in a reading group to her and she's encouraged me to try and start one anew with hopefully a younger audience. The head of the University Poetry Collection explained to me that Stephen James Joyce, (Joyce's grandson and sole living descendant), is a miserly man who has repeatedly destroyed artifacts and threatened legal action against anyone who attempts to publish or publically perform James' work. For that reason, the facsimile notebook I seek commands a painfully high price and it is highly unlikely that anything else will be published in my lifetime. The text was produced in an incredibly limited run and those with copies are collectors and scholars who are unlikely to put them up for sale. There is also a rare bookshop in town the proprietor of which is a Joyce scholar and a fellow of the Poetry Collection. He has a large framed art print in his bookshop of Nightmaze - a 2000/2001 stage adaptation of The Wake written by Vincent O'Neil of the city's Irish Classical Theatre. Sadly he isn't willing to part with it but I took down the name of the graphic design company that produced the original limited run of the print and am going to see if they would consider printing a single edition for my home. I was also incredibly grateful to be contacted by a gentleman who created an independent project compiling all known audio recordings inspired by Joyce's writings. He read some of my journal entries and asked if he could bestow the complete collection as a gift to my archive. I was honored to accept. As an introvert, (and admittedly not the most proficient at reading The Wake aloud), I've had anxiety about attempting to start a new group. Perhaps one day I'll work up the nerve, but for now, I'm just grateful to live in a city with so much love for the author. (I'll stop rambling now!) Thanks again for digging up the contact, though. I really appreciate it! :) |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:59 PM. |
© 2003-2025 Advameg, Inc.