Finnegans Wake Grappa discussion
Macaronic -us/-a/-um?
date
newest »


I lifflaff it all
McHughless but not quite McClueless in ballyaughacleaghbally

I think we need a name for this kind of McQueless Wake reading. Maybe, Wakius Classicus or Finnegan Originaliter or First Generation Finnegans or Primum Finneganessium. Something recognizing the reading as a reading like unto the First Who Ever Waked, circa 1923-. Portrait of the Waker as a First Reader kind of thing. Whaddya thunk?

I'm certainly tempted to go on reading McQueless - it's a lot more fun than double checking the annotations constantly. I'm reading a downloaded version at the moment but when I get back to my Oxford with its chapter summaries, I might just be able to continue this way with the help of the notes.
It's how you started out, isn't it? So it can be done...

Friend James, in relation to reading McElroy's Women and Men without aid (and no choice about it!), called this kind of reading 'untethered'. I did tether myself up around page 120 with, let us say, mixed results. There being a minimum of three layers -- the Viconian theocratic, aristocratic, & democratic -- I'm not sure how much of which layer I did and didn't get as a fault of having McHugh'd the whole way through (I re-restarted when Hugh arrived ; and I'm weighing how I'll restart when I next riverrunstart).
But you didn't like my grotesque pomposities in granting Titles of Knighthood to such a courageous undertaking? (those first-gen readers have my uttermostest respect).

Friend James, in relation to reading McElroy's Women and Men without aid (and no choice about it!), called this kind of reading untethered.."
Joyce would have had fun with the word untetherd! Téter in French means to suckle/be suckled.
Wakius Classicus or Finnegan Originaliter or First Generation Finnegans or Primum Finneganessium
Like the sound of Wakius Classicus, yes, WC..
Hoping your knighting arm is hefting a Wilkinson soord!
I think I have to revisit the essay with a pencil in hand to possibly recover a lost macaronic title or two.
HINT: Rabelais had a spot for the macaronic too.