Archive for June, 2009

An article about how to be bitten by the Ulysses-bug

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

A nice article on Bloomsday here by Michelle Kerns that has some good tips for easing people into a first time read of the novel. Thanks, Michelle. -Rob

Compliments and notices

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Some brief but nice commentary from Book Blips. If you scroll down, you’ll find a few links to other people’s comments, as well.

The Joyce Centre in Dublin has given us a shout out on Facebook. Read what they have to say here, and, if you’re so inclined, leave a comment.

More kind words, courtesy of Steven Hart.  Thank you, Steven!

Props from PJ Prof at Bottom’s Dream.

More compliments.

Thanks, Irish Fireside!

Ulysses “Seen” in Australia.

From Jason Boog at Galleycat (courtesy of Media Bistro).

We made #1 on their list! Not sure whether it’s in any particular order, but we appreciate it, regardless. Click here to read.

Here’s a great slideshow of pics and sounds from the Joyce Museum’s ’09 Bloomsday celebration. Thanks to kierancrotty for the link!

Ulysses “Seen” on the New Yorker’s blog!

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

The New Yorker found us on Bloomsday, and we’re quite pleased with what they had to say.

More Music, Please…

Monday, June 15th, 2009

I just saw a music blog that offered up a new (for me at least) idea about “the introit” Mulligan speaks as the first dialogue here. It seems that the Latin may be sung, meaning the first spoken words in the novel might be intended as music to rouse Stephen from the tower. Interesting idea. here’s the link;
http://blog.allmusic.com/2009/6/12/love’s-old-sweet-song-music-for-bloomsday/

This is an especially rewarding link, with ten sound files of Joyce music and a YouTube embedded reading by joyce of passages from the WAKE. Check it out. -Rob

Throwaway Horse, LLC Presents Ulysses “Seen”

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

title_page_image

On June 14, 2009 Throwaway Horse LLC will present its first project, Ulysses “Seen,” at the North American James Joyce Conference in Buffalo, New York. Ulysses “Seen” combines a graphic novelization of James Joyce’s Ulysses with an interactive reader’s guide on the World Wide Web at www.ulyssessseen.com. Comic book artist Rob Berry and Joyce scholar Mike Barsanti conceived of the project as a forum for both the first time reader and the Joyce expert to discuss, explore, and debate a book considered to be both one of the most important books of the 20th century and one of the most difficult. Throwaway Horse LLC has posted the ulyssesseen.com website as a kind of “alpha” web 2.0 project in which visitors can help shape content and direction of the site itself. The project is being presented in serialized form, like the original novel, with the hopes it can be completed in slightly less than the 10 years it took for Joyce to write the novel itself.

The conference presentation is just part of a flurry of activity leading up to June 16th, known the world-over by Joyce fans as “Bloomsday.” Named after the novel’s main character, Leopold Bloom, and marking the day in 1904 on which all of the 800 page novel’s events occurred, Bloomsday is a yearly celebration of all things Joyce. Throwaway Horse LLC has marked the day by re-launching the website on June 1, 2009 with direct linking between the comic book feature and the reader’s guide feature, as well as adding new interactive resources. Throwaway Horse LLC will also be offering a “Tweeter’s Guide” to Ulysses on twitter beginning on Tuesday, June 9, 2009 and running up to Bloomsday, offering descriptions, quotes, and insights into the novel. Throwaway Horse LLC will have a full day of twitter posts on Bloomsday itself.

The North American James Joyce conference is a biannual gathering of Joyceans in which scholarly presentations and papers are exchanged and debated. Throwaway Horse LLC hopes to enlist the participation of the attendees in helping to craft the explicatory resources aiding the fist time readers, but also to help build a scholarly forum for debate and discussion of the novel outside of the strictures of academic publishing. On some level Throwaway Horse LLC is as excited as its users watching the progress and development of a project in new and not always expected ways.

Login

Subscribe
Social Networking