James Joyce

This is a site for ReJoycing. For all things Joycean.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Transubstantiation for the Guinness Weary

When I think of Joyce I think of spindle-elm, rectors’ benches and ash-switches, the thrash and wail of God’s will into the seats of little boy’s knee-pants. Joyce’s inimitable understanding of Aquinas is evident throughout A Portrait, Ulysses and the Wake, Stephen’s exegesis on substantive form, Jesuit dogma and surplice, a Hegelian kick at the merciless mercy of a higher Jesuit education. As I am rereading Aquinas, under the tutelage of an inimitable Thomistic scholar, I can see the connections that Joyce makes between religious messianic and dogs’bodies; James Augustine Aloysius Joyce, Young Hegelian, slayer of transubstantiation and dogma, canon fodder for the intemperate and Guinness-weary.

2 Comments:

At 8:31 AM, Blogger Molly Bloom said...

Proud like a statue in St. Stephen's. Succinct like a new pin. Lovely work Stephen.

 
At 8:53 AM, Blogger Stephen Rowntree said...

'...succinct like a pin...' how evocative! Molly dearest Molly, you never cease to evoke the wonderment of words!

S

 

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