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@TEDEd
Up to the challenge? You can download an audio version of "Ulysses" (or any audio book) for free at adbl.co/2y0J0DT. And you can check out even more book recs from our team at bit.ly/2gAYa7F.
Комментарий от : @TEDEd


@naomimiryam9090
tetep gangerti walo udh 2 kali nonton
Комментарий от : @naomimiryam9090


@garebear77
ulysses is the greatest piece of writing in the history of the english language. there is nothing else like it. i’ve read it twice. joyce is the greatest genius in the history of writing. i would bet that his IQ was upwards of 185. he knew nearly two dozen languages, and was a master of english. it’s so good. don’t get stuck in what is so dense as you can’t read it. enjoy the story and the rhythm and the words.
Комментарий от : @garebear77


@skiatauli
What a wonderful, invigorating, substantial, inviting, enticing animation here. Many kudos to the animation/graphics artist/s here. Beautiful.....can't get over it. I will attempt reading Ullysses once again.
Комментарий от : @skiatauli


@Kurdedunaysiri
Now we have it in Kurmanji Kurdish too by Kawa Nemir.
Комментарий от : @Kurdedunaysiri


@DeclanTenFe
Hi, how can I contact the team that created the video for this?
Комментарий от : @DeclanTenFe


@Tulku
@TED-Ed Will you make “Why you should read:” a playlist please?
Комментарий от : @Tulku


@charleswarren1901
It's nonsense. Irrelevant.
Комментарий от : @charleswarren1901


@MarchKatze
Reading all the hate comments about this book is hilarious, a continuation of history, and incentivizing me to read it
Комментарий от : @MarchKatze


@MikaelaCher
I once saw a review of Ulysses that was so bad, so angry and emotional at both the writer and the critics it just made me want to read it lol
Комментарий от : @MikaelaCher


@JOHN----DOE
You shouldn't. Unless you're a masochist or an Irishman.
Комментарий от : @JOHN----DOE


@KaiserCeaser
1:02 ohh now I finally get the joke from the producers musical. When Leopoldo bloom says “when will it be my day? when will it be Bloomsday?”
Комментарий от : @KaiserCeaser


@RobotRoundtable
Tackling "Ulysses" is like agreeing to a blind date with James Joyce's brain: unpredictable, wildly complex, and occasionally, you'll wonder what you've gotten yourself into. This isn't just a book; it's a mental marathon with pit stops in the surreal, the profound, and the utterly baffling. Joyce doesn't just break the rules; he obliterates them, creating a literary playground that's as frustrating as it is fascinating. So, lace up your mental sneakers, pack a sense of humor and a dash of patience, and dive in. You might not emerge the same reader — or person — you were before. But hey, at least you'll have bragging rights at the next book club meeting!
Комментарий от : @RobotRoundtable


@CuongNguyen-jh9zk
Simpler = better.Two much reference and complex grammatical structure isn't necessary highly intelligent or profound.
Комментарий от : @CuongNguyen-jh9zk


@josederibamaroliveirasanto6035
Gostei, muito boa resenha, pena que a tradução, passa rápido, tive dificuldade em lêr algumas. Mas valeu a pena.
Комментарий от : @josederibamaroliveirasanto6035


@einstein8836
Well, Ulysses is like the bible at our school. Everyone loves it especially our English teacher. Students also love it a lot, some graduates who went to ivy League were on the local news and in the photos they gave they were holding a copy of Ulysses. This is my freshmen year, Ulysses and Joyce are one of the things i hear all the time.
Комментарий от : @einstein8836


@obviativ123
Ulysses is just one big inside joke.
Комментарий от : @obviativ123


@vladislavovich100
Complete nonsense, this book. Do not spend your time on it.
Комментарий от : @vladislavovich100


@Mark_Cadden
“Middle aged, cuckolded, Jewish advertising salesman walks round Dublin for the day. Letches after club footed girl at beach. Goes to red light district— gets more drunk. Meets young man, brings him home in the middle of the night ~maybe~ tries to pimp out his wife to young guy… The End”
Комментарий от : @Mark_Cadden


@yesminfarzana42
Interesting
Комментарий от : @yesminfarzana42


@charlespartrick528
Hated it. Couldn't care less about the characters, what they were doing or what their problems are - mundane.
Комментарий от : @charlespartrick528


@lucasedmund3600
on the same level as the Satanic verses.
Комментарий от : @lucasedmund3600


@writereducator
Don't bother.
Комментарий от : @writereducator


@annsanse2935
somebody get me a translation of the french passages in that book.
Комментарий от : @annsanse2935


@shaunisherwood3722
" . . . and so on"

Yeah . . .

Комментарий от : @shaunisherwood3722


@michaelodonovan7405
Unlike Ulysses which I have read many times I gave up on this after 1.16 because of the annoying pointless music
Комментарий от : @michaelodonovan7405


@narrative-meanderings
“Sometimes reality is too complex. Stories give it form.” Jean Luc Godard
Комментарий от : @narrative-meanderings


@maxpodrecca2946
Read it before Mike Johnson bans it
Комментарий от : @maxpodrecca2946


@kellyannpage1469
I have tried so many times… just can’t get it
Комментарий от : @kellyannpage1469


@walkabout16
Amidst the literary trove, a gem stands tall,
James Joyce's "Ulysses," a beckoning call,
A labyrinth of prose, a sprawling tale,
Why venture forth? Let the reasons unveil.

Within its pages, a Dublin's span,
Bloom's odyssey, an ordinary man,
A single day, a narrative vast,
A delve into moments, a die cast.

For in its depths, a linguistic delight,
Language in symphony, a mesmerizing flight,
Joyce's craft, a virtuoso's hand,
In every sentence, an intricate strand.

From stream of consciousness, a narrative rare,
To vivid characters, a vibrant affair,
Leaping from page to page, it soars,
In "Ulysses," literature explores.

Its challenges vast, yet rewards immense,
A journey through Dublin, a dense suspense,
A mirror to life, its intricate weave,
In Joyce's opus, a legacy to perceive.

The layers it holds, a narrative quest,
History, mythology, life's unrest,
A timeless work, a literary high,
In "Ulysses," a masterpiece to apply.

So why read Joyce's grand opus, you ask?
For the sheer joy of an intellectual task,
To revel in prose, to navigate the deep,
In "Ulysses," a rich treasure to keep.

Комментарий от : @walkabout16


@fisher123fisher
The fact that it is almost never clear who is thinking or saying anything in the book makes for a rather frustrating experience. I have given in and am using the annotated version now.
Комментарий от : @fisher123fisher


@js1198
Book is a snooze fest just read war and peace
Комментарий от : @js1198


@opetimistic
2023.

Hmmm

Комментарий от : @opetimistic


@Know-It-Allx
It's a real hard reading book, certainly not for leisure reading.
Комментарий от : @Know-It-Allx


@lordmoreau
One of the most boring books ever 🤦🥱
Комментарий от : @lordmoreau


@aicsynthesizer
im scared to even TOUCH ulysses. the dead took me so long to even comprehend.
Комментарий от : @aicsynthesizer


@free..to..air..
If you think Ulysses is tough..try Finnegan's Wake..that'll frazzle your brain
Комментарий от : @free..to..air..


@antoniocarlosrodriguescamp1497
I think reading has to be a pleasure and I am convinced " Ulysses" should be read at School or with the help of a Scholar. I' ve read Sterne, Proust , the Greeks, Philosophy and Portuguese , Brazilian books.... I read in English, French and Portuguese. I' ve always had a great time. I ' ve also read " The portrait of.....as a young man" in english. But at my age I wonder If it's worth reading " Ulysses": so much time that could be spent reading , instead, Kant, Hegel or Schopenhauer's " The Worl as Will and Representation" , that I have postponed reading all my life. And extract the most as I can from these.
Комментарий от : @antoniocarlosrodriguescamp1497


@philipmaher2198
If you want to read and understand the book YouTube "Reading ulysses for fun, Chris Reich"
Комментарий от : @philipmaher2198


@Jumiry1
The alleged greatness of this novel is in its incredibly pointless game-playing by the author. It is the kind of work one feels obligated to read, but life is far too short to be bothered trying to sift through this self-important prose. I almost feel sorry for the author who deluded himself into thinking his life's work was worth throwing away the potential for living an actual life.
Комментарий от : @Jumiry1


@annsanse2935
i read the book in 2007 with the help of a reading group that i joined where we met weekly to discuss our reading assignments. really wish someone would publish an english translation of all the passages in french. but i had a relatively easy time with the latin, having grown up in the old pre-vatican ii catholic church.
Комментарий от : @annsanse2935


@user-mh7ld8ki4y
One has to read a book to comment on a book / but sure it must be a different book constructive criticism but read the book then say so i will try to read nice nice 😊
Комментарий от : @user-mh7ld8ki4y


@tunny_NGGaming
The first time I herd of this book was earlier this year on a trip to Dublin. I came across a small, old, book shop that was ironically called “Ulysses” great little shop and the owner was very friendly. He had many original books for sale in there and whilst browsing I came across this book. Whilst walking around the city I saw a piece of wall art that was a portrait of James Joyce I felt like I didn’t choose the book, the book chose me😂 as soon as I got back from Dublin I ordered the book online.
Комментарий от : @tunny_NGGaming


@xavierghazi4939
The music, I find, is very irritating.
Комментарий от : @xavierghazi4939


@resmarted
aint this the fart guy?
Комментарий от : @resmarted


@spoogemop
To prove that someone can write the most appalling drivel, but as long as they can convince the public that their writing is just too deep and meaningful to be understood by /common/ people, suddenly everybody thinks it's amazing. Emperor's New Clothes, anyone?
Комментарий от : @spoogemop


@bartacomuskidd775
Should i read the odyssey first?
Комментарий от : @bartacomuskidd775


@climatedeniersbelonginasyl4191
Portrait of the artist as a young man is hard enough.
Комментарий от : @climatedeniersbelonginasyl4191


@arnulfovasquez7583
To understand the book's writing, I I would recommend a prospective reader look up the term stream of consciousness before undertaking the challenge.
Комментарий от : @arnulfovasquez7583


@DDDD-hv3ub
Why should you read Ulysses?

You shouldn't. It sucks.

Комментарий от : @DDDD-hv3ub


@nbenefiel
I read Ulysses when I was living in Dublin. Knowing the city helped. We did Bloomsday and got totally smashed. I could never get through Finnegan’s Wake but one of my college profs brought in an old 78 of Joyce reading it. The rhythm and the lilt seemed to make it magical.
Комментарий от : @nbenefiel


@operaguy1
2:10 Joyce's mission: to mock the heroic. That is the whole purpose of this project, to deconstruct and ridicule The West's value of strong independent self-actualzed individualism.
Комментарий от : @operaguy1


@virginiagrundman4012
I read it. Took me a year. Worthless.
Комментарий от : @virginiagrundman4012


@Thepeug
Opaqueness for its own sake. No thanks.
Комментарий от : @Thepeug


@joemello7888
I’ve tried reading it at least three times and have just given up. I’ll stick to nonfiction. 😀😀
Комментарий от : @joemello7888


@postiepaul
Try Finnegans Wake!
Комментарий от : @postiepaul


@LarsCarlsen-or6ky
Boring classic about small town in backward country skip it
Комментарий от : @LarsCarlsen-or6ky


@peterroberts4509
Why? Because you have nothing better to do?
Комментарий от : @peterroberts4509


@robertfranklin8704
Don't waste time on the second-rate, including lost characters. Read, instead genuine, meaningful masterpieces by Aldous Huxley and Leo Tolstoy. And much greater than Joyce, Les Miserables by Victor Hugo. Books that take you somewhere. Academics and intelllectuals today are often lost souls!
Комментарий от : @robertfranklin8704


@mingmonk
Think about how much great music would not exist today if some composers decided F#major was too difficult a key to write and perform.
Комментарий от : @mingmonk


@monumentofwonders
First of all, it's not hard to read. Finnegans Wake is hard to read. God, I'm so tired of the general stupidity of people, even people who proclaim to be expert readers, and even university professors. Thanks so much for this posting.
Комментарий от : @monumentofwonders


@jimbeam-ru1my
ulysses is an enormous fraud perpetrated on the public by our corrupt intelligentsia. It's not a work of genius, it's the ranting of a schizophrenic.
Комментарий от : @jimbeam-ru1my


@daughter_of_eve04
I immediatly knew it would be an interesting book: Ulysses is the Latin name for Odysseus...
Комментарий от : @daughter_of_eve04


@pepepecaspicapapas4726
This and Finnegan's Wake are absolute shitposts
Комментарий от : @pepepecaspicapapas4726


@XavierAway
With what Joyce said at the end, there is no question in my mind this book is not worth reading
Комментарий от : @XavierAway


@126_md.naeimhossen2
Make a video on Waste land by T. S. Eliot please
Комментарий от : @126_md.naeimhossen2


@user-tl2qn1qi1g
Quite frankly, utter self indulgent shite.
Комментарий от : @user-tl2qn1qi1g


@cheesburgerlady3598
but life isn't worth living.........
Комментарий от : @cheesburgerlady3598


@Mono-gb4hh
English literature degree here don’t believe any of these reviews of Ulysses as an Irish person no sane person understands this he’ll book and it’s honestly driven more of us too tears from trying to study for exams than any actual content
Комментарий от : @Mono-gb4hh


@sepehrasadi5997
Everyone: "Ulysses is Joyce's hardest novel to read"
Finnigans Wake: *Laughs in a corner, with puns of course

Комментарий от : @sepehrasadi5997


@alizaaa1761
Ulyssussy haha
Why tf does my brain work like this

Комментарий от : @alizaaa1761


@QuaesitorDei
No thanks. Sound like a pretentious's dream. That I am not. 😅
Комментарий от : @QuaesitorDei


@imenekh2211
I like the fact that he wrote the three chapters in differenti stili
Комментарий от : @imenekh2211


@NFace23
I'm exactly halfway through the book rn. For those who want to experience the book but fear the difficulty, I enjoy each episode without references, then just read the spark notes on it to pick up important plot things I may have missed. You don't need to understand it all.. You don't need to understand half of it. If you don't enjoy it, don't read it.

Episode 14 is a f***ing monster though

Комментарий от : @NFace23


@dmitrypetrov2436
We were going through Ulysses in my course recently, and I can say with full confidence that it is the single most annoying book I've ever had the displeasure of reading.
Комментарий от : @dmitrypetrov2436


@mihaleben6051
2:15 piece of cake for me
Unfortunately, i dont like cake, so its more like air for me, and i am not into anything nor i am a furry redacted or a furry redacted, i am asexual and i am slovene.
Eat thy beans.

Комментарий от : @mihaleben6051


@algireaux1364
Ulysses is basically a shitpost in a book.
Комментарий от : @algireaux1364


@trevisstamper1207
You shouldn’t. The end
Комментарий от : @trevisstamper1207


@nikolaibobrov7592
I think people in this comment section who say it takes them years to read Ulysses are doing it wrong. It took me two months and I understood most of it. Some tips: You NEED to read the much easier to understand A Portrair Of The Artist As A Young Man first; Ulysses is a sequel to this book. Next, it’s literally impossible to understand all of it so it’s fine if you don’t know what something means. It’s also very hard to read without a guide. you NEED to use some kind of supplemental resources, which there are lots of. I used the website Ulysses Guide to help understand as I went along. It’s like reading Shakespeare or the Bible: you need an experienced persons help.

This book really is as great as people make it out to be. It’s incredibly beautiful. People who say it’s pretentious fobbery clearly don’t know about Finnegan’s Wake.

Комментарий от : @nikolaibobrov7592


@pascalbro7524
Yeah, no. I'm not ready.
Комментарий от : @pascalbro7524


@rainphantom
Is not worth reading
Комментарий от : @rainphantom


@MilkmanAssassin
Rent a Girlfriend season 3
Комментарий от : @MilkmanAssassin


@thejvsgamer3289
I picked it up from the library, once (I was 10) and I started reading it. Super good, amazing; everything. Had me in the first 2 chapters, then in chapter 3, BAM! It was like an existential plot-twist, and everything crumbled into confusing bits and pieces. I found good joy in reading it for as long as I did, and I still remember the word: Contransmagnifisoustransiliconaosis...? I think, I can't remember.
Комментарий от : @thejvsgamer3289


@basedigor
Having studied it in college and read it three times, I would recommend The Cambridge Centenary Ulysses, released last year. It comes with critical introductions to each chapter that are accessible to anyone who would choose to read Ulysses for fun/pleasure, and it includes plenty of maps, pictures, and some footnotes but not an overwhelming amount. It is a doorstop of an edition - I read virtually every word in it, and it was a great way casually read the novel in a month - but it is also one of the physically largest books in my home full of books.
Комментарий от : @basedigor


@madzen112
Sounds like really pleasant cosplay
Комментарий от : @madzen112


@woutervannispen2325
So, why should I read it?
Комментарий от : @woutervannispen2325


@LordiValimartti
Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull Bear Bull
Комментарий от : @LordiValimartti


@emwhaibee
Joyce: Too "lazy" for properly placed punctuations.

Also,
Leo Bloom...the same as Mel Brooks' The Producers, or rather from past present to distant past story progression???

Комментарий от : @emwhaibee


@eutytoalba
Sounds like "banning" the book was a needles gesture, since no one even seems that interested. 😂 And I emphasize that both as a private literary snob and aspiring writer myself.

Fun technical fact about the use of TOO MUCH symbolism and other interliterary referencing: not only is it frequently just socialites showing off needlessly, on a practical level it's a ready source of FILLER content, and in its worst light just an allowable way to interweave plagiarism.

A rule I personally strictly follow is that naming your characters after other famous characters is basically marketing suicide; you'll always be marketing the source of the name first, and your character will almost never escape its shadow. In time, only the former will be remembered, not due to lack of merit in the author's writing but due simply to want of a linguistic uniqueness to discuss and remember it by. A subjective eclipse.

If RLS had named Long John Silver after any previous legend, there wouldn't be a Long John Silver's restaurant chain today; if the restaurant chain still existed, it probably wouldn't be named after the same character if the character had had a borrowed name himself, nothing else changed.

Комментарий от : @eutytoalba


@GM-fg3bi
he must have been blind pissed drunk when he wrote this.
Комментарий от : @GM-fg3bi


@marknewbold2583
The book that changed literature
Комментарий от : @marknewbold2583


@fantasymind8899
2:39 - 2:59 You know some people today would call that bad writing...and I would agree with them! If something is difficult to read for the average reader then the writer hasn't done their job properly.
Комментарий от : @fantasymind8899


@TheBrendNew
So, basically, he's just the MF DOOM of literature.
Комментарий от : @TheBrendNew


@juanpisukan
no you don't
Комментарий от : @juanpisukan


@Tolstoy111
One of my absolute favorite novels. Funny, deeply moving, and exhilarating.
Комментарий от : @Tolstoy111


@beyondthefuture4906
I remember trying to read this book in high school I only got past 8 pages.
Комментарий от : @beyondthefuture4906


@thecorgiman4118
Easily the greatest book I ever read
Комментарий от : @thecorgiman4118


@ekoi1995
reading auto-generated subtitles is like a stream of consciousness as well
Комментарий от : @ekoi1995


@aapowarjovaara1865
The fact that Ulysses is considered a literary masterpiece is an insult to literature
Комментарий от : @aapowarjovaara1865


@a.s.v4261
Insoportable libro!
Комментарий от : @a.s.v4261



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