Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Interview with Texas Standard (on KUT Austin NPR station) + other recent podcasts


Last week I was interviewed by the Texas Standard radio program on KUT, Austin's NPR station, talking about the Finnegans Wake Reading Group of Austin which has been gathering to discuss Joyce's greatest book for more than 12 years now. Audio clips from the interview with KUT's reporter Sean SaldaƱa appeared here, with a brief article and some pics from the group's history. The premise of the article, of course, is that we've been meeting for a very long time, reading one or two pages per meeting, and we're not nearly finished with the book yet. 

The piece has been shared on social media, garnering some witty responses. My favorite ones are the comments observing that the readers in the picture look like a deadlocked jury trying to reach a decision on a tough case. That pic is from back in the golden era of our reading group when we used to have big gatherings at the Irish Consulate in Austin (eternal thanks to Adrian Farrell, Claire McCarthy, and Paul Breen for all their support over the years). We would also have meetings at the (now defunct) bookstore Malvern Books and they'd put up a big sign in the window advertising our meetings, which is also shown in the article. The KUT interview was a fortunate full-circle cipher completion moment for me because Malvern Books back in those days used to advertise our reading group meetings on KUT, and new people joined the group because of those ads. Nowadays, our meetings are all on Zoom, and our attendees come from far beyond central Texas, although there are still plenty of original members who still participate. 

As I alluded to in the interview, I originally started the group in Austin because I had attended a similar group in Venice, California (the Marshall McLuhan/Finnegans Wake book club run by Gerry Fialka) when I lived in San Diego for a few years, a story that was originally told in The Guardian piece about the Venice Wake group published in late 2023. It's always pretty amusing seeing the response of the general public to these news pieces because to most people it seems super bizarre that a book club would be so focused on a close reading of one book for so long, and yet in the galaxy of Joyce reading groups it's pretty standard practice. I recently shared links to several active Finnegans Wake reading groups around the world, many of whom have been meeting to read the same book for years. 

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Here seems like a good place to share some other podcasts I appeared on in the past six months, again discussing Joyce and Finnegans Wake

  • Back in February, to celebrate Joyce's birthday, Gerry Fialka of the Venice Wake reading group organized a panel discussion to talk about Finnegans Wake, the panel featuring some of the most accomplished and prolific Joyce scholars in the world including Sam Slote (Trinity College Dublin), Tim Conley (Brock University), Finn Fordham (Royal Holloway Univ. of London), Roy Benjamin (Borough of Manhattan Community College), as well as myself. It was a huge honor for me to be on a panel with scholars I admire and whose work I have such great respect for, and we got into a pretty lively discussion covering many topics over more than 2 hours. Go check that out HERE.
  • Back in December, I took part in a panel discussion with a big group of several Joyce enthusiasts from around the world as part of the Maybe Night event. This panel was organized by the great artist and Wakean Bob Campbell, and among the many interesting panelists were Toby Malone (from the excellent podcast WAKE), Eric Wagner (who recently published Straight Outta Dublin, a book on Robert Anton Wilson and James Joyce), a few folks from the Ukrainian Wake reading group (including Linda Lotiel whose "Mind Map" illustrations of the Wake are phenomenal), the writer and esoteric thinker Oz Fritz, the creator of FWEET Raphael Slepon, and others, for the winter solstice 2024 event, go check out that video HERE.


Stay tuned!

Sunday, November 12, 2023

The Guardian/Observer Celebrates the Galaxy of Wake Reading Groups

Print edition of the UK Observer/The Guardian from Sunday Nov 12, 2023. Courtesy of Peter Chrisp.

The Sunday edition of The Guardian newspaper, The Observer, prominently featured an article about the Venice Finnegans Wake Reading Group having recently completed a full cycle of reading the text after 28 years. The media ecologist, Venice Wake group founder, and self-described "antiquarian ne'er-do-well" Gerry Fialka receives some great coverage here. And alongside descriptions of other Finnegans Wake reading groups led by renowned Joycean scholars Sam Slote in Dublin and Fritz Senn in Zurich, The Guardian piece interviewed me to discuss the background of the Austin Finnegans Wake Reading Group I've been hosting going on 12 years now, originally inspired by my visits to the Venice group. 

    I am honored to be a part of this celebration of Wake reading groups around the world. The author, Lois Beckett, did a great job covering the oddity of one-page-a-meeting reading groups dedicated to Joyce's bizarre night-book. To look at a global newspaper and see the front page with all the wars and turmoil and then have this article appear next to all of it feels like a celebration of the eternal forces of creativity and imagination. Poetry, the realm of the mind, the joy of art, language and humanity, remains undefeated.


    
The Guardian
piece appears on the heels of the same story being reported in newspapers and journals all across the world. Over the past couple weeks, the news of Gerry's Venice Wake group passing a 28-year reading cycle has appeared in Chinese, Afrikaans, French, Polish, Czech, various news other weird news venues, as well as the Orange County Register and the Irish Times

"wordloosed over seven seas crowdblast in cellelleneteutoslavzendlatinsoundscript. 
In four tubbloids"
(FW 219.16-17) 

    Gerry's group continues to meet on the first Tuesday of each month. Our Austin collective gathers two Thursdays a month. The Wake Watchers of NYC meet twice a month. Dozens of other collectives around the world continue to excavate the text of Joyce's puzzle book. Novelist philosopher Umberto Eco once described Finnegans Wake as "the book of an epoch of transition, a time in which science and the evolution of social relations propose a vision of the world that no longer obeys the schemas of other, more secure epochs yet lacks any formula for clarifying its own situation.  The Wake attempts to paradoxically define the new world by assembling a chaotic and dizzy encyclopedia from the old one and filling it with explanations that once seemed mutually exclusive. Through his clash and the ‘Big Bang’ of these oppositions, something new is born." (Read more testimonials here.)

    If you enjoyed this, I can also recommend you check out the trove of recorded interviews Gerry Fialka has conducted with accomplished Joyce scholars like Sam Slote of Trinity College Dublin, Roy Benjamin from Borough of Manhattan Community College in NYC, Decio Slomp from Brazil, Benjamin Boysen from Denmark, John Gordon from USA, or the late John Bishop who wrote perhaps the greatest analysis of Finnegans Wake ever. Another good one I heard recently is Gerry's interview with media theorist and author Douglas Rushkoff. Many more such podcasts from Gerry to check out on Youtube. 

    If you want to check out more of my writings on Finnegans Wake, I'd recommend starting with this piece or this book review series or this close reading of a passage, or this video essay I made. Lots more in the works, watch this space.


(Many thanks to Lois Beckett, Peter Coogan, Gerry Fialka and everyone who has ever been to the Austin Finnegans Wake Reading Group.)

Friday, April 26, 2019

Interview: Derek Pyle and Gavan Kennedy discuss upcoming "Finnegans Wake-End" celebration & "Finnegan Wakes" film project

Artwork by Boris Dimitrov.

[The 80th birthday of Finnegans Wake is next week, May the 4th. (Yes, Finnegans Wake day is also Star Wars day.) With the 80th anniversary of Finnegans Wake approaching, Dublin has been buzzing with events celebrating James Joyce's greatest and weirdest masterpiece. Two pals of mine, Derek Pyle and Gavan Kennedy, will be involved in an upcoming event called Finnegans Wake-End orchestrated by the James Joyce Centre in Dublin. Central to the festivities will be Gavan's ongoing documentary project "Finnegan Wakes" wherein a Here Comes Everybody array of random readers around the world are filmed reciting a page from the text alongside music. I did a Q&A with Derek and Gavan via e-mail discussing the upcoming Finnegans Wake-End event, Gavan's experience with the film project, and their love for Joyce's nightmaze. I'm excited to share this discussion here. Derek's words are in orange, Gavan the Irishman's words are in green. Enjoy! - PQ]