Stephen Hero

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Stephen Hero
First edition
AuthorJames Joyce
Cover artistN. I. Cannon
LanguageEnglish
GenreAutobiographical, Modernism
PublisherJonathan Cape
Publication date
1944
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)

Stephen Hero is a posthumously published autobiographical novel by Irish author James Joyce.[1] It is the early version of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Its published form reflects only a portion of the manuscript: the first 518 pages have disappeared; 383 pages remain.[2]

Joyce introduced the concept of “epiphany” in Stephen Hero to preface a discussion of Thomas Aquinas’s three criteria of beauty, wholeness, harmony, and radiance: when the object “seems to us radiant, [it] achieves its epiphany.” [3] The term isn’t used when Stephen Dedalus covers the same ground in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. In Stephen Hero the protagonist thinks of recording epiphanies in a book[3].There’s a reference to Stephen Dedalus’s collection of epiphanies in Ulysses.[4] Joyce himself recorded over seventy epiphanies, of which forty have survived.[5]

Background[edit]

Work on Stephen Hero probably began in Dublin in 1903,[6] although some scholarship suggests a date between 1904 and 1906.[7] According to Derek Attridge, it was to be "a thinly disguised autobiography, stylistically undistinguished and immensely long."[6]

Joyce abandoned the work in Trieste in 1905.[6] It was left among manuscripts given to the care of his brother Stanislaus when Joyce moved to Paris, who later sent it back to him.[8] Sylvia Beach, to whom Joyce later gave the surviving pages, wrote that, "When the manuscript came back to its author, after the twentieth publisher had rejected it, he threw it in the fire, from which Mrs. Joyce, at the risk of burning her hands, record these pages." Biographer Herbert Gorman supported this claim which has been widely reported.[9] It has been noted that no surviving parts of the manuscript have any signs of burning.[10] This surviving portion, missing the first 518 pages, was published in 1944. Stanislaus Joyce retained a separate portion of the manuscript which include a self-contained episode that would later be developed into a scene in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: This section was later rediscovered and published in 1955. Five additional pages were of this additional section later came to light in 1959 and were later reintegrated into the additional scene in 1963.[11] [12]

Literary Theory[edit]

Editor Theodore Spencer wrote in his introduction to the published edition of the manuscript that only in Stephen Hero does Joyce explicate an esthetic theory that pervades all of his other works, writing, "Stephen as he passed on his quest heard the following fragment of colloquy out of which he received an impression keen enough to afflict his sensitiveness very severely.…This triviality made him think of collecting many such moments together in a book of epiphanies. By an epiphany he meant a sudden spiritual manifestation, whether in the vulgarity of speech or of gesture or in a memorable phase of the mind itself. He believed it was for the man of letters to record these epiphanies with extreme care, seeing that they themselves are the most delicate and evanescent of moments.[13] Spencer considers this to be the basic esthetic philosophy behind all of Joyce's published writing.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Joyce, James (1944). Stephen Hero. London: Jonathan Cape. Retrieved 11 March 2024.
  2. ^ Joyce 1944, p. 15.
  3. ^ a b Joyce 1944, p. 216.
  4. ^ Joyce, James (1922). Ulysses. London: Egoist Press. p. 41. Retrieved 8 March 2024.
  5. ^ Joyce, James (2024). Collected Epiphanies of James Joyce: A Critical Edition. University Press of Florida. ISBN 0813080711. Retrieved 8 March 2024.
  6. ^ a b c Attridge, D. (2012). Joyce: The modernist novel's revolution in matter and manner. In R. Caserio & C. Hawes (Eds.), The Cambridge History of the English Novel (pp. 581-595). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521194952.038
  7. ^ Slocum, John J. And Herbert Cahoon, "Introduction", Stephen Hero, New Direcrions, New York, 1963
  8. ^ Slocum, John J. And Herbert Cahoon, "Foreword", Stephen Hero, New Direcrions, New York, 1963
  9. ^ Gorman, Herbert. "James Joyce", Farra & Rinehart, New York, 1940, p. 196
  10. ^ Slocum, John J. And Herbert Cahoon, "Foreword", Stephen Hero, New Direcrions, New York, 1963
  11. ^ Slocum, John J. And Herbert Cahoon, "Foreword", Stephen Hero, New Direcrions, New York, 1963
  12. ^ Gorman, Herbert. "James Joyce", Farra & Rinehart, New York, 1940, p. 196
  13. ^ Joyce, James. Stephen Hero, New Direcrions, New York, 1963 pp. 210-211

Further reading[edit]

  • Prescott, Joseph (1 April 1954). "James Joyce's "Stephen Hero"". The Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 53 (2): 214–223. JSTOR 27713665.
  • Stern, Richard G. (1 July 1956). "Proust and Joyce Underway: Jean Santeuil and Stephen Hero". The Kenyon Review. 18 (3): 486–496. JSTOR 4333694.
  • Troy, William (11 February 1945). "Books: Stephen Dedalus- in the Rough". New York Times.
  • Walbank, Alan (1965). "Stephen Hero's Bookshops." The Book Collector 14 no 2 (summer): 194-199.