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![]() Power, Arthur 20% off save €2.00 ISBN: 1 901866 41 6 Format: Size: Publication Date: November 1999 Add to Basket View Shopping Basket'In the Dublin of my day there was the kind of desperate freedom which
comes from a lack of responsibility, for the English were in governance
then, so everyone said what he liked. Now I hear since the Free State came
in there is less freedom. The Church has made inroads everywhere, so that
we are in fact becoming a bourgeois nation, with the Church supplying our
aristocracy, and I do not see much hope for us intellectually. Once the
Church is in command she will devour everything..' This is the first paperback edition of Arthur Power's unique and fascinating account of his friendship with James Joyce during the 1920s. Power, a young Irishman working as an art critic in Paris, first met Joyce in a Montparnasse dancehall, and the two men maintained a prickly friendship for several years. Power re-creates his conversations with the master, on a remarkable range of topics, literary and otherwise. We read of Joyce's thoughts on writers past and present: Synge, Ibsen, Hardy, Turgenev, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Dostoevsky, Gide, Proust, T.S. Eliot, Tennyson and Shakespeare. Joyce also speaks of the looming might of America ('Political influence, yes, but not cultural'); of religion ('Do you believe in a next life?' 'I don't think much of this life'); and of his own work.
THE AUTHOR
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