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- Essay Name : 1556.txt
- Uploader : sHAWN
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- Language : English
- Subject : Mythology
- Title : The Cybernetic Plot of Ulysses
- Grade : 95%
- School System : High School
- Country : Canada
- Author Comments : Damn Good essay
- Teacher Comments : Execllent work!!!!
- Date : November 96
- Site found at : I don't know!!!!
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- The Cybernetic Plot
- of Ulysses
-
- Good afternoon.
-
- To quote the opening of Norbert Wiener's address on Cybernetics to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in March
- of 1950, The word cybernetics has been taken from the Greek word kubernitiz (ky-ber-NEE-tis) meaning steersman. It has
- been invented because there is not in the literature any adequate term describing the general study of communication and the
- related study of control in both machines and in living beings.
-
- In this paper, I mean by cybernetics those activities and ideas that have to do with the sending, carrying, and receiving of
- information. My thesis is that there is a cybernetic plot to ULYSSES -- a constellation or meaningful pattern to the novel's
- many images of people sending, carrying, and receiving -- or distorting, or losing -- signals of varying import and value. This
- plot -- the plot of signals that are launched on perilous Odyssean journeys, and that reach home, if they do, only through
- devious paths -- parallels and augments the novel's more central journeys, its dangers encountered, and its successful returns.
- ULYSSES works rather neatly as a cybernetic allegory, in fact, not only in its represented action, but also in its history as a
- text. The book itself, that is, has reached us only by a devious path around Cyclopean censors and the Scylla and Charybdis of
- pirates and obtuse editors and publishers. ULYSSES both retells and re-enacts, that is, the Odyssean journey of information
- that, once sent, is threatened and nearly thwarted before it is finally received.
-
- We are talking, of course, of cybernetics avant la lettre -- before Norbert Wiener and others had coined the term. But like
- Moliere's Monsieur Jourdain discovering that all along he's been speaking prose, so Leopold Bloom might delight in learning
- that he is actually quite a proficient cyberneticist. Joyce made his protagonist an advertizing canvasser at the moment when
- advertizing had just entered the modern age. Bloom's job is to put his clients' messages into forms that are digestible by the
- mass medium of the press. If Bloom shows up in the National Library, for instance, it will be to find a logo (in what we would
- call clip art) for his client Alexander Keyes.
-
- The conduct of spirit through space and time is what communication's about. And James Joyce was interested, as we know, in
- the conduct of spirit: his own, that of his home town, and that of his species.
-
- * * *
- Once they're sent, what are some of the things that can happen to messages? They can be lost, like the words that Bloom
- starts to scratch in the sand: "I AM A..." Signals can be degraded by faulty transmission, like the telegram that Stephen
- received in Paris from his father back in Dublin: "NOTHER DYING. COME HOME. FATHER." A slip of the pen -- as in
- Martha Clifford's letter to Bloom -- destroys intended meanings, but it also, as Joyce loves to point out, creates new ones. "I
- called you naughty boy," Martha wrote to Henry Flower, "because I do not like that other world."
-
- Signals can be abused and discarded, like the fate of "Matcham's Masterstroke" in Bloom's outhouse. Signals can be
- censored, pirated, misprinted, and malpracticed upon by editors, as happened the text of this novel itself. Signals can fall into
- the wrong hands, like the executioners' letters in the pub, or they can land where they're sent but make little sense, like the
- postcard reading "U.P. up" that Dennis Breen gets in the mail.
-
- And signals can, finally, reach their intended recipient with the intended meaning, as in Bloom's pleasure in reading Milly's letter
- to him in the morning's mail. And what about that book that Stephen is going to write in ten years? There's a premonitory
- cybernetic allegory for you, and one with a happy ending to boot.
-
- * * *
- I would like to sketch for you, then, a brief and cursory chapter-by-chapter account of the cybernetic plot of Ulysses. But lest
- the listener persist in harboring doubts, as we say, concerning the cybernetic signature of the Joycean narrative, let me
- anticipate the first sentence of the 'Lotus-Eaters' episode:
-
- BY LORRIES ALONG SIR JOHN ROGERSON'S QUAY MR BLOOM walked soberly, past Windmill lane, Leask's the
- linseed crusher's, the postal telegraph office. As befits the narcotic theme of the episode, this first sentence is itself not quite
- sober. Even the first two words -- "BY LORRIES" -- are ambiguous, since the mail moves "by lorries" in a parallel but
- different sense of Mr Bloom walking "by lorries." Most significantly for our reading, this first sentence of 'Lotus-eaters' ends in
- "the postal telegraph office," suggesting that the episode, like the novel at large, is concerned with sending messages.
-
- STATELY, PLUMP Buck Mulligan came from the stairhead, bearing a bowl of lather on which a mirror and a razor lay
- crossed.
-
- That mirror will be used shortly for heliography, when Mulligan will have "swept the mirror a half circle in the air to flash the
- tidings abroad in sunlight now radiant on the sea." This is idle signal-sending, with no clear sense of a recipient. Up close, Buck
- has just hurt Stephen's feelings on the subject of his mother, and is about to hurt them again. In other words, between the two
- men, communication is poor. The signals don't get through.
-
- Also in the first episode, the old milkwoman prompts a Homeric thought attributed to Stephen: "Old and secret she had
- entered from a morning world, maybe a messenger." "Maybe a messenger!" Cyberneticists love ambiguity, particularly about
- subjects like messages and messengers in disguise.
-
- The Homeric scheme for the novel tells us that the elderly milkwoman as messenger stands for or signifies the goddess Athena
- disguised in the form of Mentor. From the first, sending a successful signal is understood from that great cyberneticist Homer to
- require a disguise. The wire that conducts truth, in an image that Pynchon favors, must be insulated. Furthermore, our best
- ideas, the Greeks thought, come to us as if from without. Thus, Telemachus receives his prompt from Athena disguised as
- Mentor, just as Stephen is metaphorically roused from inaction by the old milkwoman. A signal gets through, not despite but
- thanks to its padding, and for both Homer's and Joyce's young man, the signal prompts new ideas.
-
- History, the subject of Stephen's instruction in 'Nestor,' is what remains of signals from the past. Education itself is the ultimate
- cybernetic challenge, and Stephen grapples with it in trying to explain a math problem to a slow student from Vico Road.
- Throughout the novel, ignorance and stupidity -- respectively, a lack of knowledge and a lack of intelligence -- pose threats to
- both the characters and the culture. They are not helpful insulation; rather, they interfere with and frustrate successful
- communication. "My patience are exhausted," writes Martha Clifford to her penpal Henry Flower. Stupidity threatens to
- reduce signal to noise just as surely as the citizen later threatens to bean poor Bloom. The bigotry of anti-Semitism that Mr.
- Deasy incarnates at the end of 'Nestor' epitomizes noise, then, in the form of injurious stupidity.
-
- In 'Proteus,' the third episode, Joyce combines the references to space and time, respectively, of the first two episodes, by
- allowing the sight of the midwives on the beach to prompt Stephen's thoughts of a navelcord telephone to Eden. The famous
- telegram from his father, containing the typo which Joyce deliberately repeated from the actual telegram but which his editors
- from 1934 until 1986 insisted on correcting, also appears in this episode. "Nother dying. Come home. Father." Accidental
- noise in the signal seemed to Joyce to possess profundity, alluding as the error did to the universal condition of mortality -- a
- theme dear, as we know, to the author of "The Dead."
-
- Near the end of the 'Proteus' episode, Stephen on the strand at Sandymount wonders "Who ever anywhere will read these
- written words? Signs on a white field. Somewhere to someone in your flutiest voice." Stephen has just torn off the bottom of
- Mr Deasy's letter to the editor, so as to jot a poetic idea on it, and showing that for him the medium of a signal means nothing;
- only its spirit, or content, matters. Bloom will write letters on these sands, too; it's as if proximity to water brings out the playful
- side in signal-sending, as with Buck's earlier mirror-flashing. There is a kind of playful, throwaway signal-sending that we
- indulge in for the pleasure of NOT knowing who will receive it. "I shot an arrow into the air; it fell to earth, I know not where."
- Sending real messages is serious business; sending pseudo-messages, or non-messages to random audiences, is play. Stuff for
- the beach, not the town.
-
- In 'Calypso' (the first Bloom chapter), velopes themselves carry meaning; the one from Blazes to Molly scorches poor Bloom's
- heart. But the (quote) "letter for me from Milly" does Bloom's heart good. Signals full of meaning, ones like Milly's that land
- where they're sent, and are properly understood, can do a world of good.
-
- "Metempsychosis" is the word in this episode that prevents Molly from understanding a sentence in the trashy novel she's
- reading. The transmission of spirit across time and space is itself an idea that Poldy must translate into plain words in order for
- its meaning to reach Molly. But he does so, and she does understand. Meanings need new clothes to cross some borders, but
- quick wits know how to smuggle those meanings across.
-
- The fate of the magazine story ("Matcham's Masterstroke") that Bloom reads in the outhouse shows that some signals belong
- in the toilet. The joke's cybernetic subtext concerns the need to evaluate our culture's signs, to digest them, and to dispose of
- the unworthy ones accordingly.
-
- In 'Lotus-Eaters,' the first sentence of which we followed into the post office, Bloom receives his letter from Martha Clifford,
- with its misspelled "world." Noise threatens to wreck signal, to put meaning to narcotic sleep, but again (as with Simon
- Dedalus' telegram about "Nother dying") Joyce is fascinated by the meanings born of random error. Like the bicycle tire's
- lemniscate that fascinates John Shade, in Nabokov's PALE FIRE, the noise that seems to spell out its own new meaning offers
- another kind of pseudo-signal: not one without an intended audience, this time, but one without a real author other than chance
- itself. The Surrealists, of course, would have you believe that they cornered the market in such random marks believed to bear
- meaning.
-
- When Bloom tells Bantam Lyons that he was just about to "throw away" the newspaper, and Lyons thinks that Bloom is
- tipping him about the racehorse Throwaway, it's a clear case of noise being mistaken for signal. That's why the winning horse is
- named for disposable refuse ("Throwaway") in the first place: some signals go about disguised as noise. Joyce, unlike Martha,
- DOES "like that other world."
-
- In Hades, Bloom very simply and matter-of-factly draws the limits of communication at mortality. "Once you are dead you are
- dead." No serious signals reach us from the other side, only ridiculous ones, as Christine van Boheemen reminded us on
- Monday. The cybernetic comedy of errors deepens here as an idle word, M'Intosh, is boosted to human status, one more
- erroneous conflation of words and things.
-
- 'Aeolus' is about communication, set as it is in the newspaper office. The rhetorical devices that run rampant through the
- episode show the dangers of one's medium going opaque on one, of language becoming windy through a fatuous obsession
- with its own sound. A thoughtful style strengthens, a thoughtless style weakens any signal.
-
- In 'Lestrygonians,' Bloom receives the novel's third throwaway, the advertizing handout, which he throws to the unappreciative
- gulls. Signals only work on their intended human receivers, as we all knew already but Joyce still needed to show. As an
- advertising canvasser, as we've noted, Bloom's occupation centrally concerns the sending and receiving of commercial
- messages, and so the cybernetic conundrums of the billboard floating on the Liffey and of HELY'S sandwichboard men go
- under instant analysis in Bloom's mind.
-
- 'Scylla and Charybdis,' outside the novel, may perhaps best be seen behind the prudish censors on one side and the
- unscrupulous copyright violators who threatened the book's successful publication on the other. Piracy we call this latter crime,
- unwittingly evoking a maritime metaphor of the novel as a ship on a dangerous journey. (Recall how apt it was of Wiener to
- name cybernetics for a Greek steersman.) In the case of Ulysses, a novel that faced and continues to face Odyssean obstacles
- at every stage of the journey, the metaphor is peculiarly apt.
-
- In 'Wandering Rocks,' Father Conmee furthers the cybernetic plot by posting a letter with the help of young Brunny LyNam.
- Boylan, meanwhile, plays the cybernetic flirt: "--May I say a word to your telephone, Missy? he asked roguishly." Stephen and
- Bloom, meanwhile, are both eyeing the booksellers' carts, seeking stray signals that may or may not be meant for them,
-
- 'Sirens,' for Joyce as for Homer, reminds us that some of the most beguiling signals intend us nothing but harm. Survival may
- come only through voluntary paralysis, as when Odysseus has himself lashed to the mast. As Bloom ties and unties his fingers
- with the elastic band, Joyce again shows us insulation proving an effective defense against hurtful thoughts; in this case, Bloom's
- thoughts of marital betrayal.
-
- 'Cyclops' has that mock-theosophic signal from the other side, reporting that the currents of abodes of the departed spirits
- were (quote) "equipped with every modern home comfort such as tlfn," and so on. 'Cyclops' is also where Joe Hynes reads
- aloud from the job application letter of one H. Rumbold, Master Barber, implicitly reiterating the need for moral discrimination
- in the matter of meanings received.
-
- "Still, it was a kind of communication between us." So thinks Bloom of his silent tryst with Nausicaa in the form of Gertie
- MacDowell. And of course: "For this relief much thanks." Successfully sent and received erotic signals gratify in this narrative
- quite explicitly beyond the reach of mere music or language.
-
- 'Oxen of the Sun' allows that medium of transmission, language, to turn opaque again, to foreground itself at the risk of letting
- meanings die undelivered. (Quote:) "The debate which ensued was in its scope and progress an epitome of the course of life."
- Some signals can be made to bear multiple meanings on levels of varying profundity.
-
- In 'Circe,' Bloom shows us that the recall and timing of information can be crucial to success. He remembers what he's heard
- about Bella Cohen's son at Oxford, and uses the information in a timely fashion to protect Stephen from harm. Judgment of
- what to listen to, what to remember of what one's heard, and what to repeat and when are all essential cybernetic skills. Bloom
- also, at episode's end, picks up an imagined signal from the imagined spirit of his son Rudy, proving that to the artistic
- imagination, at least, mortality is no barrier to spirit after all. (Of course, readers of Dubliners had already learned that from
- Michael Furey.)
-
- Its absurd pedantic deadpan notwithstanding, the 'Ithaca' episode nonetheless communicates that even the worthless crumbs of
- Plumtree's Potted Meat in one's bed may be read as signal.
-
- 'Eumaeus' features yet more signal degraded into noise. The newspaper account of the funeral inadvertently drops an L from
- the name of L. Boom. Even the mock sailor's postcard from landlocked Bolivia furthers the episode's theme of exhausted and
- phony meanings.
-
- In 'Penelope,' finally, communication comes once again to mean the successful transmission of spirit among bodies. The flesh
- assents all too indiscriminately in this episode, but Bloom is home safe, dominant at last in his wife's thoughts, his message of
- unprepossessing love mocked, ridiculed, travestied, and betrayed, but ultimately received, understood, and acknowledged.
-
- The style of Joyce's novel, with its access from the very first scene to Stephen's own thoughts, and then to Bloom's, and finally
- to Molly's, implies that no communication, no means of meaning, succeeds so well as that of the artistic imagination. When he
- said "Madame Bovary, c'est moi," Gustave Flaubert was teaching Joyce to disregard and ultimately to refute the supposed
- inscrutability and reputed inaccessibility of the Other. The lines may be down between husband and wife, they may be tottering
- between father and daughter, but between the author's spirit and that of his characters, le courant passe, the current flows
- without impedance.
-
- Any signal, like a Homeric hero, is threatened with ruin by the alluring sirens of noise. Any piece of information, or any spirit
- afloat in our culture, that is, faces an Odyssean battle in order to make it through. Consider the obeisance of publisher to legal
- power that used to appear at this novel's front gate, for instance. This NOVEL had to undergo an odyssey before coming
- home to our minds. The law tried to stop it, pirates tried to loot it, but the text, like its characters, came through relatively
- unscathed.
-
- Cybernetic messages and the obstacles to their correct transmission present one of the manifold yet parallel plots in ULYSSES
- -- with our own successful comprehension of the novel furnishing the happy ending to a cybernetic allegory in which character,
- action, and text all come through, finally, loud and clear. The book, that is, enacted a Joycean design over which Joyce himself
- could have had little control, for the book itself recapitulated the Odyssean journey across perilous seas. Pirates, monstrous
- one-eyed censors, Procrustean editors kept mangling a Protean text. And yet here it is, home free, safely harbored in our
- minds and in our hearts.
-
- Thank you very much.
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-