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Journal ArticleDOI

Verbivocovisuals: James Joyce and the Problem of Babel

01 Jan 2010-James Joyce Quarterly (The University of Tulsa)-Vol. 48, Iss: 1, pp 89-109
TL;DR: In Ulysses and Finnegans Wake, Joyce turns to visual and gestural languages (film, hieroglyphics, and illuminated manuscripts) in an effort to subvert theories of an “Aryan” language and to imagine a more inclusive origin for all the world’s cultures in Egyptian hierophics as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: This article situates Joyce’s work within a larger discourse about the problem of Babel or about how, in a newly globalized world, different cultures and language groups might best communicate with one another. The journal transition —in which Joyce’s work was serialized and whose editor, Eugene Jolas, he knew well—served as a clear-inghouse for ideas about how a new universalism might be forged: either through Joyce’s Wake se and other avant-garde experiments or through the philosopher C. K. Ogden’s Basic English. Fascinated by these theories of universal language and drawn to the anti-imperialist politics underlying them, Joyce, in Ulysses and Finnegans Wake , turns to visual and gestural languages—film, hieroglyphics, and illuminated manuscripts—in an effort to subvert theories of an “Aryan” language and to imagine a more inclusive origin for all the world’s cultures in Egyptian hieroglyphics. Ideas of linguistic or media “purity” are allied in Joyce with the danger of Nazi claims for racial purity. His emphasis on the commonality of writing and new media becomes a political gesture: a way of insisting on the unity of all races, cultures, and languages in a mythic past.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A surprise announcement by then prime minister Tony Blair in 1998 led to the creation of a new senior clinical role - the nurse consultant.
Abstract: A surprise announcement by then prime minister Tony Blair in 1998 led to the creation of a new senior clinical role - the nurse consultant.

462 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Mar 2011

69 citations

01 Jan 2018
TL;DR: McNees, Ph.D. as mentioned in this paper was one of the first recipients of the award, which was presented in 1-1-2018 Document Type Dissertation Degree Degree Name Ph.
Abstract: Date of Award 1-1-2018 Document Type Dissertation Degree Name Ph.D. Department English First Advisor Eleanor McNees, Ph.D.

35 citations

Book
02 Feb 2015
TL;DR: The authors argues that the problem of vagueness - language's unavoidable imprecision - led to transformations in both fiction and philosophy in the early 20th century, linking the development of literary modernism to changes in philosophy.
Abstract: Modernist Fiction and Vagueness marries the artistic and philosophical versions of vagueness, linking the development of literary modernism to changes in philosophy. This book argues that the problem of vagueness - language's unavoidable imprecision - led to transformations in both fiction and philosophy in the early twentieth century. Both twentieth-century philosophers and their literary counterparts (including James, Eliot, Woolf, and Joyce) were fascinated by the vagueness of words and the dream of creating a perfectly precise language. Building on recent interest in the connections between analytic philosophy, pragmatism, and modern literature, Modernist Fiction and Vagueness demonstrates that vagueness should be read not as an artistic problem but as a defining quality of modernist fiction.

19 citations

Book ChapterDOI
26 Nov 2012

10 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...36 Schotter 2010, pp. 91, 93....

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

1,622 citations

Book
14 Aug 2019

706 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a study of the influence of language upon thought and of the Science of Symbolism on the development of basic English and its application in the 21st century.
Abstract: Significs The Progress of Man's Linguistic Heritage A New Solution of the Universal Language Problem Opposition: A Linguistic and Psychological Analysis How Not to Make a Dictionary Sound, Sense and Intelligibility: An Orthological Interpretation of Stress and Rhythm The Prosody of Gerard Manley Hopkins The Origins of Archetypation 352pp Bentham's Philosophy of As-If Ghosts, Fictions and Incomplete Symbols Bentham's Theory of Language Bentham's Theory of Legislation Basic English and Grammatical Reform Debabelization The Basic Vocabulary Basic for Science 376pp The Meaning of Meaning: A Study of the Influence of Language upon Thought and of the Science of Symbolism 591pp Counter-Offensive: An Exposure of Certain Misrepresentations of Basic English 396pp From Russell to Russo: Reviews and Commentaries (I A Richard's article on "Basic English and its applications" reproduced with permission from the Journal of the Royal Society of Arts, Vol.LXXXVII, No. 4515, 2 June 1939). 460pp

588 citations

Book
08 Apr 1997
TL;DR: In this paper, a Semiotic Model for Natural Language (SML) is presented, based on the Kabbalistic Pansemioticism and Kabbala of Names.
Abstract: Series Editor's Preface. Introduction. 1. From Adam to Confusio Linguarum. Genesis 2, 10, 11. Before and After Europe. Side-effects. A Semiotic Model for Natural Language. 2. The Kabbalistic Pansemioticism. The Reading of the Torah. Cosmic Permutability and the Kabbala of Names. The Mother Tongue. 3. The Perfect Language of Dante. Latin and the Vernacular. Language and Lingusitic Behavior. The First Gift to Adam. Dante and Universal Grammar. The Illustrious Vernacular. Dante and Abulafia. 4. The Ars Magna of Raymond Lull. The Elements of the Ars Combinatoria. The Alphabet and the Four Figures. The Arbor Scientarium. The Concordia Universalis of Nicholas of Cusa. 5. The Monogenetic Hypothesis and the Mother Tongues. The Return to Hebrew. Postel's Universalistic Utopia. The Etymological Furor. Conventionalism, Epicureanism and Polygenesis. The Pre-Hebraic Language. The Nationalistic Hypotheses. Philosophers against Monogeneticism. A Dream that refused to Die. New Prospects for the Monogenetic Hypothesis. 6. Kabbalism and Lullism in Modern Culture. Magic Names and Kabbalistic Hebrew. Kabbalism and Lullism in the Steganographies. Lullian Kabbalism. Bruno: Ars Combinatoria and Infinite Worlds. Infinite Songs and Locutions. 7. The Perfect Language of Images. Horapollo's Hieroglyphica. The Egyptian Alphabet. Kircher's Egyptology. Kircher's Chinese. The Kircherian Ideology. Later Critics. The Egyptian vs. the Chinese Way. Images for Aliens. 8. Magic Language. Hypotheses. Dee's Magic Language. Perfection and Secrecy. 9. Polygraphies. Kircher's Polygraphy. Beck and Becher. First Attempts at a Content Organizations. 10. A Priori Philosophical Languages. Bacon. Comenius. Descarted and Mersenne. The English Debate on Character and Traits. Primitives and Organization Content. 11. George Dalgarno. 12. John Wilkins. The Tables and the Grammar. The Real Characters. The Dictionary: Synonyms, Periphrases, Metaphors. An Open Classification? The Limits of Classification. The Hypertext of Wilkins. 13. Francis Lodwick. 14. From Liebniz to the Encyclopedie. Characteristica and Calculus. The Problem of the Primitives. The Encyclopedia and the Aphabet of Thought. Blind Thought. The I Ching and the Binary Calculus. Side-effects. The 'Library' of Liebnitz and the Encyclopedie. 15. Philosophic Language from the Enlightenment to Today. Eighteenth-century Projects. The Last Flowering of Philosophic Languages. Space Languages. Artificial Intelligence. Some Ghosts of the Perfect Language. 16. The Internatonal Auxiliary Languages. The Mixed Systems. The Babel of A Posteriori Languages. Esperanto. An Optimized Grammar. Theoretical Objections and Counter-objections. The 'Political' Possibilitites of an IAL. Limits and Effability of an IAL. Conclusion. Translation. The Gift to Adam. Notes. Bibliography. Index.

477 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A surprise announcement by then prime minister Tony Blair in 1998 led to the creation of a new senior clinical role - the nurse consultant.
Abstract: A surprise announcement by then prime minister Tony Blair in 1998 led to the creation of a new senior clinical role - the nurse consultant.

462 citations