Re: Joyce, Episode 28. The Black Panther Returns
We sit down to a fortified breakfast, and meet Haines and his dream. Also: more blasphemy.
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We sit down to a fortified breakfast, and meet Haines and his dream. Also: more blasphemy.
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Any chance you could speed up the output a touch, I ain't young and I've got a cough.
Posted by: brendan kelly | Jan 02, 2011 at 08:33 PM
I remember a few years ago when I first read Ulysses in college, I became fascinated with that black panther for a while. And, in fact, I followed the exact same line of thought that you do and went to my Dictionary of Christian Lore and Legend and found that mythology of the panther; it just seemed so obvious that Joyce must be playing with Christian mythology even in such a minor detail. Assuming that's what Joyce had in mind, the question becomes, why? Why put a symbol for Christ in Haines' dream? Why not use a Pelican instead?
Posted by: Damien Patton | Jan 13, 2011 at 06:42 AM
Mr. Delaney--I heard you on Public Radio recently. While I respect and admire your work, I must disagree with you about "Ulysses." I was forced to read that book twice in college and hated every page of it. I doubt if anyone truly enjoys it. They just don't want anyone else to think that can't understand it. If it is so great, why must you teach people to understand it? One thing's for sure, I will never suffer from reading a single sentence of it again.
Thanks,
Ralph Hood
Posted by: Ralph Hood | Feb 16, 2011 at 09:30 PM
This series is one of the most wonderful ideas on the Net. But I think each segment should be at least 10 minutes long. I would like my children's children to be alive to hear the word 'Yes'.
Posted by: Darren | Apr 29, 2011 at 05:36 PM
I, too, have been asked, if it's so good, why must you teach people to understand it? My answer is: it's like physics or calculus or quantum mechanics. One needs a tutor to point out the beauty of the grand patterns. Unless you're Newton or Gell-Mann, of course... or Mr. Delaney.
Posted by: Steve K | May 18, 2011 at 01:04 PM