SubmissMe wrote:Ok, how about this.
Finnegans wake, masterpiece of literature or the biggest leg-pull in history?
What is it about? Was he serious in writing it? What ideas does it aim to convey?
Your thoughts please..............
Finnegans Wake is a dream about life, death, rebirth; it's Joyce's attempt to do for the night what Ulysses did for the day.
Nominally, it's the story of the River Liffey, personified as Anna Livia Plurabelle, as it flows into the sea to die and be reborn/wake up, but, like dreams, it's meaningful on many levels.
Joyce famously said FW was written for the "ideal reader with an ideal insomnia," and given its difficulty I'd say that's an accurate description. I certainly haven't read very much of it! But it's great fun to tease out, and it can be funny and beautiful. Most would probably say that Joyce got carried away and produced something so dense and erudite as to be virtually unapproachable, but it's certainly not a joke -- it's a serious work by a great artist.