tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1157342843002612388.post6248915081033991469..comments2024-03-05T15:10:07.370-06:00Comments on A Building Roam: "Thought Through My Eyes": Epilogue, Part 2PQhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14491626995530401441noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1157342843002612388.post-30640544310816949172011-07-15T22:38:32.928-05:002011-07-15T22:38:32.928-05:00I think the Wake completely embodies the same type...I think the Wake completely embodies the same type of principles. As I said at the end of the original essay, there's just so much more of this stuff to study and analyze---the Wake in relation to Dali's work, especially.<br /><br />I read recently one of Joyce's friends describing his years working on the Wake as though he were actively engaged in a hallucinatory excavation of some sort, a mining of the unconscious (both personal and collective). This is certainly what Dali is doing as well with the paranoiac method, bringing to the fore material from deep inside the mind. Material from regions so deep that they contain the power to communicate with an unknown but universal part of anyone's psyche/soul.<br /><br />This is definitely all very Wakean stuff, I think it is a paranoaic projection for you but that projection intuitively matches with the reality.PQhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14491626995530401441noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1157342843002612388.post-55466175205019694582011-07-15T22:26:55.055-05:002011-07-15T22:26:55.055-05:00Wow. A terrific further essay. It's funny, I t...Wow. A terrific further essay. It's funny, I think, that it's only by my group's reading of the Wake that I can relate to so much of what you're saying, but on the other hand, that might just be my own paranoic projection!seana grahamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03774794086733027289noreply@blogger.com