Browse Results
Search returned 7 record(s). Results sorted by publication date.
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Toynbee, Philip. "A Comic Heir of James Joyce." Alive-Alive O!: Flann O'Brien's At Swim-Two-Birds.
Ed. Imhof, Rüdiger.
Appraisal Series. Dublin:
Wolfhound Press,
1985.
47-50.
ISBN 0-389-20581-8.
Reprinted from The Observer (24 July 1960).
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Toynbee, Philip. "A Comic Heir of James Joyce." Observer,
(24 July 1960):
26.
Joyce's influence on Flann O'Brien.
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Toynbee, Philip. Review of Colum, Mary;
Colum, Padraic,
Our Friend James Joyce,
1958.
Encounter 12,
v (May 1959):
67.
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Toynbee, Philip. "A Study of Ulysses." Polemic,
no. 7 (March 1947):
34-43.
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Toynbee, Philip. "A Study of Ulysses." Polemic,
no. 8 (March 1947):
28-39.
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Toynbee, Philip. "A Clue to Finnegans Wake." Review of Campbell, Joseph;
Robinson, Henry Morton,
A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake,
1947.
Times Literary Supplement no. 2382,
(27 September 1947):
492.
"The ingenuity and industry of these two American scholars are astonishing." FW "a belildering masterpiece of compression." J creates "chords" via the puns etc, but they are inharmonious and can create unintended associations. "These private analogies and illustrations are a pedantic appendage.they contribute little or nothing." Joyce has used his book learning without discrimination, treating it with the frivolity of a jigsaw puzzle, laoding his magnificent theme with an impenetrable deadweight of cross-reference." "The language, the tone, the key of the whole book is uniform." Letters in response from F.Garfield Howe, no. 2383 (4 October 1947): 507; from Walter Taplin, no. 2384 (11 October 1947): 521.
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