This page lists all the sources that have gone into forming the collection to date – a modest list, indeed. The presence or absence of an item from the list is by no means an indication of merit, importance or value. Some valuable studies of Finnegans Wake are missing from the list because I had read them before starting the collection. Some items that do appear on the list have contributed exactly zero elucidations to the collection; they are still listed to note that everything of worth has already been extracted from them (and to mourn a tree dead in vain). If anything, this list is in some ways an indication of my present penchant for thinner volumes. Obviously, the lion's share of the Finnegans Wake studies corpus is absent for the simple reason that it has not yet been read into the collection. Nudge, nudge.
Slowly but surely other people join forces with me in reading books and articles into the collection, for which I am truly grateful. Accordingly, those sources that were not read by me are marked as such using the following abbreviations:
Please understand that many of the listed sources contain much information that cannot be translated into the elucidation format; that is why they are books and articles rather than just lists of notes. The presence of an item in one of the lists below should in no way imply that a serious student of Finnegans Wake is exempt from reading it on his or her own.
Since Fweet does not note the individual source for each
specific elucidation, it might not be always obvious where one should
look if one wishes, for whatever reason, to refer to the original
source of some elucidation found in Fweet's database. To remedy
this drawback of Fweet, I highly recommend to use
The James Joyce Checklist, an amazing resource that lists virtually
every study ever published about Joyce and his work, coupled with a
capable search engine. For example, if you are intrigued by some
elucidations about cricketers in Finnegans Wake and wish to read
the original article(s) from which Fweet may have taken its
elucidations, your best bet would be to enter The James Joyce
Checklist's Search page (via the link above) and type "cricket*" (i.e.
cricket followed by an asterisk) in the text-box marked "with all of
the words:". You will receive a list of seven (or so) resources
(articles and chapters in books), of which one looks quite promising,
namely Ron Malings's "Cricketers at the Wake". A similar approach can
be used to locate studies related to many other topics. If, however,
The James Joyce Checklist does not offer a solution to your particular
query, please remember that you can always contact me (via the "Comment
on Me!" button) and I will do my best to help you.
In the book section, special mention should be made of the two volumes that formed, and still form, the core of the collection – the first two editions of McHugh's Annotations to Finnegans Wake (a third edition has already been published) – as well as of the growing number of black volumes that supply it with notebook entries and their sources – the wonderful Deane–Ferrer–Lernout Brepols edition of the Buffalo notebooks.
Author or Editor | Title | Year |
---|---|---|
Armand, Louis & Pilný, Ondřej (ed.) | Night Joyce of a Thousand Tiers: Petr Škrabánek Studies in Finnegans Wake | 2002 |
Atherton, James S. | The Books at the Wake: A Study of Literary Allusions in James Joyce's Finnegans Wake | 1959 |
Atherton, James S. | The Books at the Wake: A Study of Literary Allusions in James Joyce's Finnegans Wake (expanded & corrected edition) | 1979 |
Beckett, Samuel & al. (O) | Our Exagmination Round His Factification for Incamination of Work in Progress | 1929 |
Begnal, Michael H. | Dreamscheme: Narrative and Voice in Finnegans Wake | 1988 |
Bonheim, Helmut | A Lexicon of the German in Finnegans Wake | 1967 |
Brivic, Sheldon | Joyce's Waking Women: An Introduction to Finnegans Wake | 1995 |
Campbell, Joseph & Robinson, Henry Morton | A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake | 1944 |
Christiani, Dounia Bunis | Scandinavian Elements of Finnegans Wake [HR] | 1965 |
Cintra, Antonio Carlos de Araujo | A Vocabulary of the Portuguese in Finnegans Wake | 2003 |
Crispi, Luca & Slote, Sam (ed.) | How Joyce Wrote Finnegans Wake: A Chapter-by-Chapter Genetic Guide | 2007 |
Cumpiano, Marion | Saint John of the Cross and the Dark Night of FW | 1983 |
Dalton, Jack P. & Hart, Clive (ed.) | Twelve and a Tilly: Essays on the Occasion of the 25th Anniversary of Finnegans Wake | 1966 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: A Reader's Guide to the Edition | 2001 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.10 | 2001 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.29 | 2001 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.3 | 2001 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.14 | 2002 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.25 | 2002 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.6 | 2002 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.1 | 2003 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.16 | 2003 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.33 | 2003 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.32 | 2004 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.47 | 2004 |
Deane, Vincent & Ferrer, Daniel & Lernout, Geert (ed.) | The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo: Notebook VI.B.5 | 2004 |
DiBernard, Barbara | Alchemy and Finnegans Wake | 1980 |
Gibson, George Cinclair | Wake Rites: The Ancient Irish Rituals of Finnegans Wake | 2005 |
Gordon, John | Notes on Issy | 1982 |
Harrington, Judith | James Joyce: Suburban Tenor | 2005 |
Hart, Clive | Structure and Motif in Finnegans Wake | 1962 |
Hart, Clive & Senn, Fritz (ed.) | A Wake Digest | 1968 |
Jacquet, Claude | Joyce et Rabelais: Aspects de la création verbale dans Finnegans Wake | 1972 |
Jenkins, William D. | The Adventure of the Detected Detective: Sherlock Holmes in James Joyce's Finnegans Wake | 1998 |
Jolas, Eugene | Man from Babel [MF] | 1998 |
Joyce, James | Corrections of Misprints in Finnegans Wake (appended to a Viking edition of FW) | 1947 |
Lernout, Geert | James Joyce, Reader | 2004 |
Lernout, Geert (ed.) | Finnegans Wake: Fifty Years (European Joyce Studies 2) | 1990 |
Litz, A. Walton | The Art of James Joyce: Method and Design in Ulysses and Finnegans Wake | 1961 |
McCarthy, Patrick A. | The Riddles of Finnegans Wake | 1980 |
McCarthy, Patrick A. | Joyce, Family, Finnegans Wake | 2005 |
McHugh, Roland | The Sigla of Finnegans Wake | 1976 |
McHugh, Roland | Annotations to Finnegans Wake | 1980 |
McHugh, Roland | The Finnegans Wake Experience | 1981 |
McHugh, Roland | Annotations to Finnegans Wake (revised edition) | 1991 |
Norris, Margot | The Decentered Universe of Finnegans Wake: A Structuralist Analysis | 1974 |
O'Rourke, Fran | Joyce's Quotations from Aristotle, 'Allwisest Stagyrite' | 2005 |
Patell, Cyrus R.K. | Joyce's Use of History in Finnegans Wake | 1984 |
Rose, Danis | Chapters of Coming Forth by Day | 1982 |
Rose, Danis | The Textual Diaries of James Joyce | 1995 |
Rose, Danis & O'Hanlon, John | Understanding Finnegans Wake: A Guide to the Narrative of James Joyce's Masterpiece | 1982 |
Rose, Thomasine | Verbi-Voco-Visual: The Presence of Bishop Berkeley in Finnegans Wake | 1981 |
Sawyer-Lauçanno, Christopher | The World's Words: A Semiotic Reading of James Joyce's Finnegans Wake and Rabelais' Gargantua et Pantagruel | 1993 |
Schork, Joe | Joyce and the Classical Tradition | 2004 |
Solomon, Margaret C. | Eternal Geomater: The Sexual Universe of Finnegans Wake | 1969 |
Treip, Andrew (ed.) | Finnegans Wake: Teems of Times (European Joyce Studies 4) | 1994 |
Troy, Mark L. | Mummeries of Resurrection: The Cycle of Osiris in Finnegans Wake | 1976 |
Van Hulle, Dirk | Joyce & Beckett Discovering Dante | 2004 |
Wall, Richard | An Anglo-Irish Dialect Glossary for Joyce's Works | 1986 |
Behind this short section lie thousands of articles related to Finnegans Wake that fill the pages of these periodicals. Access to the now relatively rare A Wake Newslitter issues was made available through the highly-recommended Split Pea Press A Wake Newslitter CD-ROM.
Name | Volumes or Numbers | Years |
---|---|---|
A Finnegans Wake Circular | nos. 1.2-1.4; vols. 2-4, 6-7 | 1985-1992 |
A Wake Newslitter,0 Old Series | nos. 1-18 | 1962-1963 |
A Wake Newslitter,1 New Series | vols. 1-17 | 1964-1980 |
A Wake Newslitter,2 Occasional Papers | nos. 1-4 | 1982-1984 |
Genetic Joyce Studies (at www.geneticjoycestudies.org) | nos. 1-24, JJA, Lost & Found | 2001-2024 |
James Joyce Online Notes (at www.jjon.org) | nos. 1-18 | 2011-2023 |
James Joyce Quarterly | vols. 1-47 | 1963-2010 |
Joyce Studies Annual | vol. 1 | 1990 |
Joycenotes | nos. 1-3 | 1969-1969 |
The Analyst (see its table of contents) | nos. 1-26 | 1953-1971 |
The James Joyce Review | vols. 1-3 | 1957-1959 |
This is a preliminary section, still ridiculously short, that is more the result of contributions from Fweet users than any representation of a deliberate reading plan.
Author | Title | Periodical | Issue | Pages |
---|---|---|---|---|
Van Hulle, Dirk | The Inclusion of Paralipomena in Genetic Editions | Jahrbuch für Computerphilologie | no. 7, 2005 (available online) | 141-148 |
Reisman, Karl | Darktongues: Fulfulde and Hausa in Finnegans Wake | Journal of Modern Literature | vol. 31, no. 2, winter 2008 | 79-103 |
Boyle, Robert H. | "Flies Do Your Float": Fishing in Finnegans Wake | The American Fly Fisher † | vol. 30, no. 2, spring 2004 | 13-29 |
Santesso, Aaron | Dickens in Finnegans Wake [HR] | The Dickensian | vol. 99, pt. 2, no. 460, summer 2005 | 122-126 |
† If I may, I would like to point out here that I strongly
disapprove of piscicidal activities, especially those masquerading as a
sport or a pastime
This is a preliminary section, still ridiculously short, that is more the result of contributions from Fweet users than any representation of a deliberate reading plan.
Author | Title | Chapters and/or Pages | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Callaghan, Morley | That Summer in Paris [HR] | Chapter XVII (pp. 116-123) | 1963 |
Eco, Umberto | Mouse or Rat? | Radical Rewriting (pp. 73-76) | 2003 |
Hayman, David | A First-Draft Version of Finnegans Wake | Introduction and Appendix (pp. 1-45, 286-330) | 1963 |
Moholy-Nagy, L. | Vision in Motion [HR] | Finnegans Wake (pp. 344-352) | 1947 |
Rathjen, Friedhelm | Dritte Wege: Kontexte für Arno Schmidt und James Joyce | Thorne Smith in the Wake (pp. 79-84) | 2005 |
Reynolds, Mary T. | Joyce and Dante: The Shaping Imagination [MF] | Appendix, Finnegans Wake (pp. 302-326) | 1981 |
Ryf, Robert S. | A New Approach to Joyce: The Portrait of the Artist as a Guidebook [HR] | Chapter 8, The "Portrait" and "Finnegans Wake" (pp. 98-105) | 1962 |
This section lists 192 people and groups – Joyceans and non-Joyceans – who have contributed in various ways to the improvement of Fweet, primarily through the offering of new elucidations or the correction of existing ones. Thank you. Contributors: if you would like to add your own descriptive one-liner (along the lines already exemplified by a few brave souls below) or update an existing one (as many times as you wish), please just send me a comment.
A.G. Waltz, US | Adam Gee, UK 1 | Adam Harvey, US 2 | Adrià, Spain | Aidan McGourty, Ireland 3 |
Alex Gregoire, US 4 | Alex Valenzuela V., US | Alexander Marquez, Venezuela 5 | Alexander Thieme, Denmark | Andreas Berger, Austria 6 |
Andreas Flack, Germany 7 | Andrei Herzlinger, Israel 8 | Andrew Gibson, UK 9 | Andrew Heathwaite, US 10 | Andrey Rene, Russia 11 |
Anonymous 12 | Anthony Murray, US | Arye Kendi, Israel | Aston Verz, France 13 | Ben Carlsen, US |
Bernadette Freeman, US 14 | Bernhard Rose, Germany | Bill Shockley, US 15 | Bloomsday in Melbourne, Australia 16 | Bob Dewey, US |
Boriana Alexandrova, UK | Brendan Ward, Ireland 17 | Brent Hannah, Australia 18 | Brett Stauffer, US | Brian Hitt, US 19 |
Brian Moynihan, US 20 | Bud Nathans, US | C.E. Hoequist, US 21 | Caetano W. Galindo, Brazil 22 | Cemal Can Özmumcu, Turkey & Germany 23 |
Chris Eagle, Belgium | Chris Potter, Sweden | Christel Davies, US | Christopher Whalen, UK 24 | Claudia Rubinstein, Israel |
Clifford Marcus, UK 25 | Conor O'Toole, Ireland | Corey Dansereau, US | Craig Wyatt, US | Creagh Factor, US & UK 26 |
Dan Absolon, UK 27 | Daniel Mora, Costa Rica 28 | Danis Rose, Ireland | David Atwood, Bermuda 29 | David Butz, US |
David Clarke, Scotland 30 | David Cunningham, Scotland 31 | David Pringle, US | David Stone, UK 32 | Den Holden, UK & China 33 |
Dennis Giszczak, US | Detlev Enkler, Germany | Earle Lane, US | Edward Burns, US | Eilidh Ruthven, UK |
Elaine Mingus, US 34 | Eli Lassman, UK | Emiliano, Argentina | Enrico Terrinoni, Italy | Eric Arbiter, US 35 |
Eric Rosenbloom, US 36 | Esther Murer, US 37 | Evangelos Rekleitis, Greece | Fabricio Morgado, Brazil 38 | Fergus Johnston, Ireland & Bulgaria |
Finn Fordham, UK | Frances Devlin-Glass, Australia | Frank Grimes, UK | Frank, US | Frederick Hindman, US |
Friedhelm Rathjen, Germany 39 | Gary Yuen, US | Gerry Grimes, Ireland | Gerry Hughes, Ireland 40 | Giacomo Seletti, Italy |
Giovanna Forni, Germany | Grant Franks, US | Greg Koster, US 41 | Griffin Hinton, US | Harald Beck, Germany 42 |
Harold Ryan, Canada [HR] | Helen Saunders, UK 43 | Ian Garvie, UK | J.B., US | J.I. Casar, Mexico |
Jaap Stobbe, Netherlands | Jacques Bogaarts, Netherlands | James Lion Johnson, US | Jan Hammerquist, Hong Kong | Jarrod Baniqued, Philippines 44 |
Jason Ciaccio, US | Jeffrey Rose, US 45 | Jeremie Wenger, UK | Jerry Aulenbach, Canada | Jian Wang, China 46 |
Jim Keegan, US | João Lourenço, Portugal 47 | Joel Fleming, Canada | Joel Reisman, US | John Farr, Denmark |
John Gordon, US | John Hughes, Australia 48 | John Kelly, US | John Miller, US | John Sandbach, US |
John Simpson, UK 49 | Jonathas Duarte, Brazil | Juan Díaz Victoria, Mexico | Judd Staley, US | Judith Harrington, US |
Judith Marie Brennan, UK | Karim Benslama, France | Karl Reisman, US | Kevin Gilroy, US | Krzysztof Bartnicki, Poland 50 |
Kyle Foley, US & Jordan 51 | Levin Magruder, US | Liam, Ireland | Linus Elliott Ignatius, US | Luther Wilson, US |
Malcolm Kelly, Ireland | Malcolm Markovich, England | Marcelo Zabaloy, Argentina | Markus Agwin, Austria | Mary Otis Stevens, US |
Mary Percival, UK 52 | Matteo Perper, US 53 | Matthew Horrell, US | Max Carol, US | Michael Dishler, US 54 |
Michael Farrell, UK & Australia [MF] 55 | Michael Graetz, Singapore | Michael O'Kelly and JJ Institute, Ireland 56 | Michael Timins, US | Mick Bolger, US 57 |
Miri Jassy, Australia 58 | Murat Sevgil | Nasim, Poland | Nathan Perry, US | Nava Zvaig, Israel & US |
Nicholas Wilson, UK 59 | Nikolaus Hirth, Germany | Orlando Mezzabotta, Italy 60 | Oscar Ackerman, Wales | Paraic McKenna, UK 61 |
Pascale, Canada | Pete Taylor, UK 62 | Peter Biella, US | Peter Burns, US 63 | Peter Chrisp, UK 64 |
Peter Jennings, Canada 65 | Peter Reichenberg, US 66 | Phillip Bannowsky, US | R.C., US | Raphael Slepon, Israel & US 67 |
Rob Hardy, US | Robert H. Boyle, US | Robert Harbison, UK | Ron Ewart, Switzerland | Ronan Crowley, Ireland & US 68 |
Roy Kayouf, Israel | Russell, US | Ryan Hitchcock, Republic of Korea | Sandy McCroskey, US | Sandy Tropp, US |
Sean Wagner, US | Sergio Pastor, US | Simon Loekle, US 69 | Stefano Rosignoli, UK & Ireland 70 | Stephanie Korney, US 71 |
Steve Carey, Australia 72 | The Thirsty Scholars, US 73 | Thomas Finnegan, US | Thomas Speer, US 74 | Tim Cotton, Australia |
Tim Scott, UK | Tim Voogt, Netherlands | Tim Wolf, US | Tobias Harris, UK | Ursula Zeller, Switzerland |
Victor, Spain | Walt Davies, US | Walter Heenan, US 75 | Wes McCullough, US | William Brown, UK or US |
Wim Van Mierlo, UK 76 | Yarden Eitan, Israel & UK |
1 Adam Gee is a London-based TV producer who loves 'Ulysses' and is a long-term participant in the 'Wake' research seminar at Senate House, University of London
2 Adam Harvey is an actor/performance artist from the American southwest who has performed full chapters of Finnegans Wake on both sides of the big pond; he is presently in dialogue with Boston Baroque's Martin Pearlman about a possible spoken-word/musical hybrid adaptation of Joyce's final masterwork; Adam runs a James Joyce reading group in his home town of Santa Fe, New Mexico
3 Dr. Aidan McGourty is a chemical engineer and director of Macnean Hedge School, Ireland
4 Alex Gregoire is a Distinguished Librarian's Lackey; more details about his own library may be found here
5 Alexander Marquez, abit translathor, reder, longuage leerner and polyglot, translaytes the Wake to Asspanish, in a samewhat completelly different way, mimmikin Joyce's style, in less then a yearn, despit not heaving read his peevious work at all at all, en during an eterinal 92 degrees gruel summer
6 Andreas Berger is from Vienna, Austria, and a recent FW reader only trying to overcome the obstacles mainly deriving from the multiple rules of English pronunciation(s)
7 Andreas Flack needed a break from making short films and started to work on a very long Finnegans Wake read-along audiobook
8 Andrei Herzlinger is a retired chemical engineer and an amateur Joycean
9 Andrew Gibson has produced various books on Joyce. For 27 years he was Director of the London University Seminar for Research into 'Ulysses'. He was also Co-Founder and Co-Director of the London University Seminar for Research into 'Finnegans Wake'.
10 Andrew Heathwaite is a composer, activist, teacher, vegan, experimenter, polyhuman and metaclown, generating alternatives in collaboration with the School for Designing a Society in Urbana, Illinois
11 Andrey Rene is working on Russian translation of FW at http://samlib.ru/r/rene_a/
12 Anonymous refers to contributions appearing in my email inbox, primarily through Fweet's "Comment on Me!!" facility, without the contributor revealing his or her identity, as well as to those from contributors asking not to be identified by name here (thank you, one and all)
13 Aston Verz is a Wake cartoonist, whose few scattered pages could be seen in the Joyce Studies Annual 2014
14 Bernadette Freeman is an American artist who creates images in collage (including a portrait of Leopold Bloom), working in Santa Fe, NM
15 Bill Shockley is a US Navy (retired), software engineer and development manager (retired), intermittent Wakian, who identifies with Shem but is probably more of a Shaun
16 Bloomsday in Melbourne is, among other things, a Finnegans Wake reading group; its website is here
17 Brendan Ward is a Marathon runner from Dublin who takes part in regular readings of Joyce's works in Sweny's Chemist, where Bloom bought his lemon soap (still available) on Bloomsday
18 Brent Hannah was born in the hospital in which James Joyce died. Coincidence?
19 Brian Hitt is a behavioral neurologist and Joyce hobbyist in Orange County, California
20 Brian Moynihan (BPhil, MA, MSIS, PMP, MBA, Etc.) lives close to the Haw River, and was happy to find it honored on the site; he discovered FW after the birth of his son Leo set off a series of Joycean coincidences
21 C.E. Hoequist's initials are CEH, which he shares with his father; this means something; he's sure of it
22 Caetano W. Galindo has translated all (ok, almost all) of Joyce's works to Brazilian Portuguese. His translation-in-progress of Finnegans Wake still keeps him up at nights, though...
23 Cemal Can Özmumcu is an amateur Joycean who loves experimental literature and seize the whorled in punoramic view!
24 Christopher Whalen is studying for a DPhil at Oxford University on "Palimpsesting in James Joyce"; more details may be found here
25 Clifford Marcus is a freelance Spanish/French/Italian/Russian-to-English translator; more details may be found here
26 Creagh Factor is a Stanford student who has recently discovered a love for FW; she is also a former debater, an avid medievalist, and a lover of the outdoors
27 Dan Absolon is an ESL teacher/gardener/manual labourer comforted by Finnegans Wake
28 Daniel Mora is a math student fascinated by languages, literature and the joycean labyrinths
29 David Atwood is the Director Designate for EGovernment in Bermuda
30 David Clarke was formerly a CA and university lecturer... now attempting to join the growing group of Wakean geneticists...
31 David Cunningham is a theatre lighting designer, lighting operas and plays, and a life-long Joyce freak
32 David Stone is a retired Cardiologist writing a PhD on Joyce at Kings College London
33 我是个写诗的人!
34 Elaine Mingus, who died in 2014 at the age of 87, was an independent Joyce scholar, based in Albuquerque. She published her papers on Joyce in a book, Toccatootletoo!
35 Eric Arbiter is a professional classical musician ("of the pentapolitan poleetsfurcers bassoons..." FW 565.4 Houston Symphony, actually; retired 2019), a professional photographer and Zen teacher, captivated by Mr Joyce for 44 years. His book on reed making for the bassoon, The Way of Cane, is published by Oxford University Press (2020). There are several quotes from FW in it.
36 Eric Rosenbloom wrote A Word in Your Ear and his Finnegans Wake website is here
37 Esther Murer is a former library cataloguer (German and Slavic), literary translator (Norwegian) and researcher on Biblical references in 17th-century Quaker writings (mostly Commonwealth and Restoration periods) who loves dipping into FW at random and counts it as an important influence on her poetry (at 75, she's about to publish her first collection)
38 One liner? For me?
39 Friedhelm Rathjen is a free-lance translator and lit-crit and a self-publishing Joycean; more details may be found here
40 Gerry Hughes is a BSc Computer Science from Trinity College, Dublin; loves all things Joycean. Current zoom participant in the Tuesday weekly reading of FW organised by the Zurich James Joyce Foundation
41 Greg Koster, an assistant public defender in Chicago, never reads FW during office hours
42 Harald Beck and John Simpson are the editors of James Joyce Online Notes, which does not focus on FW, but has occasional references to it and a collection of links to the items in Joyce's Trieste library
43 Helen Saunders is a PhD candidate at King's College London, writing a thesis on Joyce's relationship to fashion
44 Jarrod Baniqued is an independent researcher on sabbatical at the moment. He aspires to begin the Wake one day
45 Jeffrey Rose is a lifelong reader of Joyce who has finally embarked on the journey across the Wake
46 Jian Wang is an engineer and enjoys reading FW very much
47 João Lourenço is a teenager with a wide range of interests (from the stupid rationality of mathematics to the stupid irrationality of arts); he writes in his free time (his work is still in progress), reads a lot and will probably go to the university in the next two years to study mathematics or physics
48 John Hughes, member of Melbourne Finnegans Wake Reading Group
49 John Simpson and Harald Beck are the editors of James Joyce Online Notes, which does not focus on FW, but has occasional references to it and a collection of links to the items in Joyce's Trieste library
50 Krzysztof Bartnicki translated Finnegans Wake into Polish; more details may be found here
51 Kyle Foley is passionate about the wake (as evidenced by his being one of Fweet's most active contributors to date) and would like other wakeans to contact him at kylefoley202@gmail.com
52 Mary Percival is a very late arrival at the Wake but although still in Part 1 can see it becoming a twin obsession rivalling her passion for the Commedia
53 Matteo Perper is a Joyce enthusiast and Giordano Bruno devotee graduating from Stanford with degrees in Biochemistry and Italian Philosophy and Literature
54 Michael Dishler is a semiretired Acupuncturist, a longtime dedicated Joyce reader, and at present a praiser of his own past
55 Michael Farrell was born in Galway, grew up in Dublin and lives in London; he is a Reader in Addictions in Kings College London; he enjoys close reading of JJs works simply for pleasure
56 Michael O'Kelly's annotations from the JJ Institute Dublin reading group, which has been reading FW on and off for over forty years
57 Mick Bolger is the singer with the group Colcannon
58 Miri Jassy is a postgraduate researcher in the Global Irish Studies Centre at the University of New South Wales, Sydney; her PhD thesis is on the representation of the antipodes in Finnegans Wake
59 Nicholas Wilson is a composer; on the centenary of Joyce's birth on 2 Feb 1982, he accidentally spilt Jameson whiskey on his grave in Zurich
60 Orlando Mezzabotta is an actor who reads the Wake just for fun and has written (just for fun) OPFERTUERE, a finntalian multimedia version of the first chapter of the Wake
61 Paraic McKenna is an accountant originally from Dublin, currently UK-based but increasingly domiciled in FW
62 Pete Taylor reads Joyce for fun, listens to lots of music, drinks tea and makes bread
63 Peter Burns is a storyteller and stuntologist; his website used to be at www.talespins.com
64 Peter Chrisp writes the Wake blog, From Swerve of Shore to Bend of Bay
65 Peter Jennings is a nomadic artist and inventor who has been enjoying FW since 1967; his website is here
66 Peter Reichenberg is the author of "Finnegans Wake: The Dating Game"; James Joyce Quarterly, Volume 46, Number 2, Winter 2009
67 Raphael Slepon is the person behind Fweet and behind An Ovel
68 Ronan Crowley (@Yellworque) thinks we need a new Joyce biography
69 Simon Loekle (R.I.P.) used to pen A Dazibao for the JJQ and present literary readings Saturday mornings over WBAI 99.5 FM NYC; his own website is still here
70 Stefano Rosignoli carries on research on James Joyce and Samuel Beckett in London and Dublin
71 Stephanie Korney is a word fanatic and rabbit-hole explorer
72 Steve Carey wrote his doctorate on the comedy in Ulysses at Oxford University under Richard Ellmann. He is Treasurer of Bloomsday in Melbourne, Australia
73 The Thirsty Scholars is a Finnegans Wake reading group in Boston, Massachusetts
74 Thomas Speer is an amateur Joycean
75 Walter Heenan is an amateur Wake Fan and a master builder. Formerly of software. Currently piling building supra building pon the flanks of the mountains known as Kaaterskill — in a little town named Woodstock (yup, that one)
76 Wim Van Mierlo (Institute of English Studies, University of London) has published on Joyce, Yeats and Flann O'Brien; his research is in the field of Modernism, Anglo-Irish Literature and Modern Manuscript Studies
Hopefully, with time, more sections, such as mailing list archives, will appear.
[Site Map] Last Update: Oct 18 2024