
Contents
Cite
Extract
According to Stephen Dedalus, the fundamental flaw in the hockey game that takes place after his history lesson is that “Cochrane and Halliday are on the same side.” So it is with Joyce and Lawrence: in order for the great game of modernism to be played at its highest level, the two players must line up on opposite sides. According to T. S. Eliot, in his heretical book After Strange Gods, Lawrence is the heretic, and Joyce the orthodox writer, an unorthodox argument that Stephen Spender later overturned. But which is which? Would it not be fairer to say that Joyce is the more heretical writer, fledged on Ibsen’s celebration of individual choice, while Lawrence remained true to the circumscribed world of the subject of his early literary study, Thomas Hardy? The answer provided in this excellent reappraisal is that they can be both, but not at the same time. They are contraries, in the Blakean sense: two elements in continual opposition. As Blake says in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, “Opposition is true Friendship”; Joyce and Lawrence are eternally at odds, each a Scylla to the other’s Charybdis. Modernism’s original odd couple, as Earl Ingersoll calls them in this volume, they shared the same literary agent (James Pinker, whose death in 1922 was possibly the most significant literary event of that year, given a clientele that included Henry James, Ford Madox Ford, G. B. Shaw, and Thomas Mann), fought similar legal battles against the censor, and had the common distinction of being pirated by Samuel Roth. Louise Kane shows us how their work rubs together in the pages of the Egoist, tracking their movements through the literary magazines of the time. Brancusi’s Symbol of Joyce, the rock and the whirlpool, is as much a symbol of Lawrence as it is a symbol of both.
Sign in
Personal account
- Sign in with email/username & password
- Get email alerts
- Save searches
- Purchase content
- Activate your purchase/trial code
- Add your ORCID iD
Purchase
Our books are available by subscription or purchase to libraries and institutions.
Purchasing informationMonth: | Total Views: |
---|---|
August 2024 | 1 |
Get help with access
Institutional access
Access to content on Oxford Academic is often provided through institutional subscriptions and purchases. If you are a member of an institution with an active account, you may be able to access content in one of the following ways:
IP based access
Typically, access is provided across an institutional network to a range of IP addresses. This authentication occurs automatically, and it is not possible to sign out of an IP authenticated account.
Sign in through your institution
Choose this option to get remote access when outside your institution. Shibboleth/Open Athens technology is used to provide single sign-on between your institution’s website and Oxford Academic.
If your institution is not listed or you cannot sign in to your institution’s website, please contact your librarian or administrator.
Sign in with a library card
Enter your library card number to sign in. If you cannot sign in, please contact your librarian.
Society Members
Society member access to a journal is achieved in one of the following ways:
Sign in through society site
Many societies offer single sign-on between the society website and Oxford Academic. If you see ‘Sign in through society site’ in the sign in pane within a journal:
If you do not have a society account or have forgotten your username or password, please contact your society.
Sign in using a personal account
Some societies use Oxford Academic personal accounts to provide access to their members. See below.
Personal account
A personal account can be used to get email alerts, save searches, purchase content, and activate subscriptions.
Some societies use Oxford Academic personal accounts to provide access to their members.
Viewing your signed in accounts
Click the account icon in the top right to:
Signed in but can't access content
Oxford Academic is home to a wide variety of products. The institutional subscription may not cover the content that you are trying to access. If you believe you should have access to that content, please contact your librarian.
Institutional account management
For librarians and administrators, your personal account also provides access to institutional account management. Here you will find options to view and activate subscriptions, manage institutional settings and access options, access usage statistics, and more.