1. Contexts and their problematics 2. ‘Pinocchio! Oh Pinocchio! You’re a boy! A real boy!’ — boyology and stories of childhood in Pearse and Joyce. 3. ‘Is it with Paddy Stink and Mickey Mud?’ — systemization and portraits of the artist as schoolboy 4. Early Joyce and radical education 5. A Portrait of the Artist and the cultural politics of the public school novel 6. Education and the social worlds of Ulysses 7. Ulysses and the age of informatics 8. Joyce and the textbook — ‘Oxen of the Sun’ and ‘Eumaeus’ 9. ‘I’m not so ignorant’ — women and education 10. ‘Come si compita cunctitititilatus?’ — education and Finnegans Wake 11. Bibliography
Len Platt has published widely on modernist literary culture, especially on the works of James Joyce. He is also a leading expert on early musical theatre and on the exchange and transfer practices that made it a characteristic culture of conservative popular modernism at the fin de siècle.
"Len Platt has produced a ground-breaking book. Joyce and Education
is a forensic exploration of how Joyce's work engages with both the
social and psychological aspects of schooling. Platt exposes how
the structure of schooling and education at the time Joyce was
writing, produced hierarchies and elites - something that endures
within the education system of the here and now.This scholarly
account is highly informative, readable and often amusing. This is
a text not only for James Joyce scholars but for all who are
concerned with how education policy and practice works to maintain
social order and the status quo." - Rosalyn George, Professor of
Education
"Len Platt has produced a ground-breaking book. Joyce and Education
is a forensic exploration of how Joyce's work engages with both the
social and psychological aspects of schooling. Platt exposes how
the structure of schooling and education at the time Joyce was
writing, produced hierarchies and elites - something that endures
within the education system of the here and now.This scholarly
account is highly informative, readable and often amusing. This is
a text not only for James Joyce scholars but for all who are
concerned with how education policy and practice work to maintain
social order and the status quo." - Rosalyn George, Professor of
Education, Goldsmiths, University of London
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