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William York Tindall

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William York Tindall (1903-1981) was an American James Joyce scholar with a long and distinguished teaching career at Columbia University. [1]

Born in Vermont, he studied at Columbia, both as an undergrad and graduate student. Between those courses of study, in 1925 he set off to see Europe. He went to Paris and bought a copy of Joyce's Ulysses -- then banned in America. By chance, he bought it on June 16th, Bloomsday, the day in which all the events in the book take place. He had it rebound as a French novel to carry it through US Customs.

That began Professor Tindall's study of and advocacy for Joyce's works in America; in fact, he started teaching Ulysses even before the book was allowed in the US. Therefore students in his first Ulysses course were forced to read the the dean's copy kept secured in the university library.

Finally in 1933, the United States District Court in New York City [2] ruled that the novel was not obscene and could be published in America. In January, 1934, Ulysses was finally available legally in the US and no one had to rely on the library copy any more.

Professor Tindall's teaching career at Columbia lasted from 1931 to 1971. For four decades, he taught some of the most popular literary criticism courses in the curriculum.

He pioneered a method of reading Joyce's most difficult novel Finnegan's Wake with a small group of graduate students, everyone adding a bit of their academic knowledge to the task. He called this Reading by Committee, saying that the group brought to it "a variety of languages and learning, [and] might do more with the book than I alone, with small learning and less Greek."[3]

Several of Tindall's classic works of criticism, including A Reader's Guide to James Joyce and A Reader's Guide to Finnegan's Wake are still in print. He wrote a total of thirteen books on UK authors including Dylan Thomas, William Butler Yeats, Samuel Beckett, and of course, James Joyce.[4]




References

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