Is stately meant as an adjective or an adverb? It's fucking killing me

Is stately meant as an adjective or an adverb? It's fucking killing me

Other urls found in this thread:

shmoop.com/ulysses-joyce/)
twitter.com/NSFWRedditImage

...

It's an adjective, OP. Are you not a native speaker?

Are you?

Prefer it as adverb, but can't imagine the "stately, plump" adjective contrast isn't intended.

Stately as an adverb here sounds awkward to me.

Almost one hundred years later, debate rages over the first word of Ulysses. Is James Joyce the greatest artist of all time?

so?

Maybe the greatest writer, and I do consider literature the highest of the arts, so perhaps.

As an adverb, it suggests parody on the part of Buck Mulligan. As an adjective, it suggests parody on the part of Joyce, who decides to imbue his clown character with stately qualities to begin the day. But to phrase it this way immediately raises the question of the narrator of Ulysses—whose voice is this? to whom is it addressed? by what apparatus (sensory?) has it judged Mulligan to be stately in the adjectival reading? viewed in this way, the possibility of the adverbial reading functions as a sort of dialectical containment strategy for the narrator, a sort of camouflage in which it can at once hide itself, make itself absent, all while alerting us, forcefully, violently—descriptively—to its miasmic presence.

Why is prefer an adverb when it's clearly a verb? And what is even a difference between adverb and adjective in english, if they look the same?

an adjective describes a thing
an adverb describes an action.

so either buck mulligan is himself stately, or he is doing things in a stately manner. or both, of course—but the real brain bender is considering the possibility of neither.

Buck Mulligan himself is stately.

Maybe the narrator is talking to someone named Stately.

If it's used as an adjective, a comma is missing

I laughed out loud

Music is the highest though...

Kek

how can you know for sure?

spaghettios

Joyce would actually love this.

An adverb can also describe another adjective. So maybe his plumpness is itself stately.

Joyce agreed
He probably wanted to be a musician but he had more talent for writing

>implying there is a single chapter of Ulysses where the rules of grammar aren't mangled in monstrous ways

t. Joyce

Well the word statelily is used later in the novel, so it seems like a lil joyce joke, it seems like it's either/both, we're almosting it til we see statelily later on.

maybe it means Stately as in: "I am stating this" or "in truth" or "basically".
sort of like Hwaet at the beginning of beowulf.

either that or

adjective you dunce

>can't get past first sentence without getting tripped up

give it up lad

the opening word is stately because it contains the final word of the novel (StatElY - YES) reversed.

I know it feels weird, but it's there because of that. Joyce was a huge fanboy for synchronicity, reflections, and mysticism within his work. That's also why the first phrase has 22 letters.

>blown
>away

i don't even want to call bullshit

mmn--no

there is a contrast between when Molly first speaks in the novel, in chapter 4, from the bed, and vaguely murmurs "mn" (no), and the last chapter when she last speaks and loudly and clearly says "yes".

in that sense there is synchronicity, yes

I always thought it was

I stately

why does he include the I if there is no other chapter numbering

>people will believe this

Can you prove that with algebra?

Just go with the flow bro. You won't understand much of it cuz it's fucking ulysses

Go with the flow. You won't understand most of the book. That's why hipsters love it

>5th post on a shitty thread on a Cambodian basket weaving website

I'm imagining it being an adverb, where plump is him being 'stately' thrown down the staircase.

>contradicting me

read Coincidance by Robert Anton Wilson. there's an quoted interview between Joyce and Ellmann that confirms this fact.

pleb.

>You won't understand most of the book.

Yes you will. If you read it alongside the Gifford Annotated. You are parroting nonsense that you have heard here as though it's fact.

>ulYssES

yes and no, he chose the word for that reason, but he had many words to choose that could fit, there's a reason he chose that particular word

This is like the FedEx arrow of literature.

no he did not agree you dolt, have you never read Portrait

FUCK

Somewhere, James Joyce is losing his shit

I read all of these....and still feel like I barely scratched the surface of Ulysses.

Which would you recommend most highly?

God this makes me want to read it so much. Thanks user!

Honestly, the best thing I read was Shmoop (shmoop.com/ulysses-joyce/)

But, the "Allusions in Ulysses" is 500 pages of every single reference that Joyce was making. It is really a head-trip. Like, the reference "Polite Conversations" by Jonathan Swift about 60 separate times.

The Stuart-Gilbert book is best for understand what Joyce was trying to do. It was written while he was alive, and he agreed with most of it.

You're the hermeneutical dolt if you actually opt for an autobiographical reading of Portrait

>i have never read and know nothing about James Joyce

cool man

Man shut the fuck up

It's really on some other shit like that?

why

I want to start with Joyce, and have read Dubliners. I am however sort of spooked by the amount of references that seem to be written in Ulysses, which is why I don't want to read it unless I can at least understand half of them.

Am I being a pussy-bitch, should I just go for it?

Stately, as in making a statement.
Jesus fucking christ

You can just skip Ulysses and go to Finnegans Wake if you want, it's way better any way.

I see what you did there

This. Plus a copy of Bloomsbury for chapter summaries.