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Come on, it's Ulysses. Considered by many to be the second hardest book in the English language (mostly because the hardest book in the English language requires a working knowledge of 8 other languages to read), reading Ulysses is both enjoyable and provocative. Despite its reputation, it's not too difficult to read.

  1. Before learning how to read Ulysses, you have to know what you're getting into. Ulysses comprises 18 "Episodes". Each of these episodes was serialized separately, and each one reads completely differently. For example, Episode 14 parodies all of the great authors of the English language, going from Chaucer to Dickens, and Episode 18 is a lengthy monologue of about 10,000 words that comprises two giant run-on sentences. Every Episode reads like a completely different book, and therein lies the beauty of Ulysses.[1]
  2. When doing a formal, academic study of Ulysses, you should buy some form of guidebook. These books are about four hundred pages thick and explain Ulysses line by line. This is good because Ulysses is full of esoteric puns and references, and the guidebooks explain it all. However, switching from guidebook to guidebook over and over is very annoying. The best way to read Ulysses, if you're trying to read it for fun, is to just dive right in, saving all of those guidebooks for a college course.[2]
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  3. No, really, this seven-hundred page text is hilarious. The entire idea of the novel is that Joyce is taking the epic heroes of The Odyssey and turning them into these pathetic Dubliners. The end of Episode 4 features a ten-page poop joke written in the same elevated language as The Odyssey. Understanding that every sentence has some form of joke in it, be it some esoteric reference to literature or a subtle pun, turns Ulysses into a very intelligent comedy.[3]
  4. But that's mostly because Joyce designed it that way. Part of the joke is that you're not going to get everything, and there's humor in that. Laugh whenever you don't get something, because you've just walked into one of the most brilliant practical jokes in literature.[4]
  5. Because each chapter is written differently, it takes a few pages to get into the rhythm of each episode.[5]
  6. Since each episode has a different style, knowing what to appreciate beforehand can help. As such, here is a list of all of the episodes and their brand of comedy.
    • Episode 1: Normal novel.
    • Episode 2: An informal catechism.
    • Episode 3: Elitist masculine monologue.
    • Episode 4: Poking fun at great historic heroes.
    • Episode 5: The hypnotic nature of religion.
    • Episode 6: Death.
    • Episode 7: Making fun of journalism (it's written like a newspaper; pay attention to the headlines).
    • Episode 8: Food puns, everything can be eaten and everything eats in this chapter.
    • Episode 9: Making fun of Hamlet and elitists who debate over obscure pieces of literature (in particular making fun of certain scholars who would later analyze Ulysses).
    • Episode 10: This chapter has nothing to do with the main characters. It is instead presented as a series of short stories surrounding the side characters. The humor is that it is in fact largely pointless and that most of the side characters make fun of the main characters.
    • Episode 11: Everything is a music pun. A lot of onomatopoeia is used.
    • Episode 12: There are two narrators: one is hyper-colloquial to the point of not making sense and one is hyper-scientific to the point of not making sense. The competition between the narrators produces the comedy.
    • Episode 13: Narrated by a young girl and everything is a sex joke.
    • Episode 14: An elaborate parody of all the great English authors.
    • Episode 15: Written as a hallucinatory play in a red-light district.
    • Episode 16: This chapter is very ambiguous and the comedy comes from mistaking characters for other characters.
    • Episode 17: Written as a catechism, the comedy comes from the hyper-scientific question and answer format being applied to the mundane.
    • Episode 18: Streaming consciousness of Bloom's wife.
  7. Joyce wrote two graphic organizers. They are called the schemas. Use them to introduce yourself to the chapter. They can be found here:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linati_schema_for_Ulysses and here:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_schema_for_Ulysses [6]
  8. In an Irish accent, preferably. A lot of the puns make more sense when heard.
  9. Reading this novel is difficult, so you have to set up a schedule for yourself or you'll give up.[7]
  10. A lot of Ulysses makes fun of the novel's Dubliners and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, so reading them beforehand allows you to practice reading Joyce's style and gives you background knowledge for some of Joyce's jokes.[8]
  11. When you get a joke, write it down in the margins. It'll help you understand other similar jokes.
  12. This is a work of comic fiction. Laugh aloud. Laugh at everything. It's funny.
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    Which novel requires a working knowledge of 8 other languages to read as stated above?
    HumanBeing
    HumanBeing
    Top Answerer
    Finnegan's Wake is reputed to be a very challenging read. It might help a reader to have a working knowledge of eight other languages to finish it, but with ten 100-letter words, it's not guaranteed! Note that Finnegan's Wake was written by James Joyce, who also wrote Ulysses.
  • Question
    How many pages are in the book?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    This depends on your version, some versions have only 40 pages but it's printed on A2 paper. Also, if you have the official signed hardback edition, you get an extra three pages at the start by James Joyce.
  • Question
    Why do people continue to put an apostrophe on Finnegan. It is Finnegans Wake, no apostrophe. A plural. Finnegan may be a metaphor for Irish people. In other words, they should wake, according to Joyce.
    Garrett Lynch IRL
    Garrett Lynch IRL
    Community Answer
    Since Finnegan is a typical Irish surname there may be some element of confusion between Joyce's Finnegans (i.e. as a collection of people) and the use of Finnegan's as a genitive word (i.e. Finnegan's Wake or his wake). Finnegan's Wake (with a comma) is also an Irish-American comic ballad, first published in New York in 1864, that refers to the wake (funeral) of a character called Tim Finnegan. This is how you would expect to see the phrase written and may further add to this frequent error.
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Warnings

  • If you start reading Ulysses, you will start talking about Ulysses, and when you talk about Ulysses, you are apt to lose friends.
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Things You'll Need

  • A copy of Ulysses. (The Modern Library one is good. Preferably one with large margins.)
  • Time.
  • A pen for annotations.

About This Article

Annaliese Dunne
Co-authored by:
English Teacher
This article was co-authored by Annaliese Dunne. Annaliese Dunne is a Middle School English Teacher. With over 10 years of teaching experience, her areas of expertise include writing and grammar instruction, as well as teaching reading comprehension. She is also an experienced freelance writer. She received her Bachelor's degree in English. This article has been viewed 235,611 times.
419 votes - 95%
Co-authors: 21
Updated: July 6, 2024
Views: 235,611
Categories: Reading
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 235,611 times.

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