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A Confederacy of Dunces

A Confederacy of Dunces is a novel by American writer John Kennedy Toole that was published in 1980, 11 years after Toole's death.[2] Published through the efforts of writer Walker Percy (who contributed a foreword) and Toole's mother, Thelma, the book became first a cult classic, then a mainstream success; it earned Toole a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981 and is now a canonical work of modern literature of the Southern United States.[3]

A Confederacy of Dunces
AuthorJohn Kennedy Toole
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreComedy, tragicomedy
Published1980
PublisherLouisiana State University Press
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback), audiobook, e-book
Pages405 (paperback)[1]
AwardPulitzer Prize (1981)
ISBN0-8071-0657-7
OCLC5336849
813/.5/4
LC ClassPS3570.O54 C66 1980

The book's title refers to an epigram from Jonathan Swift's essay Thoughts on Various Subjects, Moral and Diverting: "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him."

Dunces is a picaresque novel featuring the misadventures of protagonist Ignatius J. Reilly, a lazy, obese, misanthropic, self-styled scholar. He is an educated but slothful 30-year-old living with his mother in the Uptown neighborhood of early-1960s New Orleans. In his quest for employment, he has adventures with colorful French Quarter characters. Toole wrote the first draft in 1963 during his last few months in Puerto Rico. Critics liked the accurate depictions of New Orleans dialects. Toole based Reilly in part on his professor friend Bob Byrne. Byrne's slovenly, eccentric behavior was anything but professorial. Reilly resembled Toole; Toole's experiences served as inspiration for episodes. While at Tulane University, Toole filled in for a friend as a hot-tamale cart vendor and worked for a family who owned and operated a clothing factory.

Synopsis edit

Ignatius Jacques Reilly is an overweight and unemployed 30-year-old with a master's degree in Medieval History. He lives with his mother, Irene Reilly. He loathes the world, which he feels has lost the values of geometry and theology. One afternoon Reilly's mother drives him "downtown in the old Plymouth, and while she was at the doctor's seeing about her arthritis, Ignatius had bought some sheet music at Werlein's for his trumpet and a new string for his lute." While Reilly waits for his mother, Officer Angelo Mancuso approaches Reilly and demands that Ignatius produce identification. Affronted and outraged by Mancuso's zeal and officiousness, Reilly protests his innocence to the crowd while denouncing the city's vices and the graft of the local police. An elderly man, Claude Robichaux, takes Reilly's side and denounces Mancuso and the police as communists. In the resulting uproar, Mancuso arrests Robichaux while Reilly and his embarrassed mother escape and take refuge in a bar.

There, Mrs. Reilly drinks too much. On the way home, she crashes her car. The bills for the accident total $1,020, a sizable amount of money in early 1960s New Orleans and which would be a little over $10,000 in 2023. To help his mother pay for the accident, Ignatius must work for the first time in years.

What follows is a series of adventures that introduce characters and their interactions as Ignatius flounders from one low-wage job to another. Ignatius obsesses over his wardrobe, verbally abuses his mother, and frequents movie theaters, where he condemns the actors and actresses. The novel explores the psyche of a man who, every time he feels stress, observes the action of his pyloric valve. Reilly maintains an adversarial relationship, and possibly a flirtation, with the politically liberal Myrna Minkoff, his only friend from college.

Major characters edit

Ignatius J. Reilly edit

Ignatius Jacques Reilly is something of a modern Don Quixote—eccentric, idealistic, and creative, sometimes to the point of delusion.[2] In his foreword to the book, Walker Percy describes Ignatius as a "slob extraordinary, a mad Oliver Hardy, a fat Don Quixote, a perverse Thomas Aquinas rolled into one". He disdains modernity, particularly pop culture. The disdain becomes his obsession: he goes to movies in order to mock their perversity and express his outrage with the contemporary world's lack of "theology and geometry". He prefers the scholastic philosophy of the Middle Ages, and the Early Medieval philosopher Boethius in particular.[4] However, he also enjoys many modern comforts and conveniences and is given to claiming that the rednecks of rural Louisiana hate all modern technology, which they associate with unwanted change. The workings of his pyloric valve play an important role in his life, reacting strongly to incidents in a fashion that he likens to Cassandra in terms of prophetic significance.[5]

Ignatius believes he does not belong in the world and that his failings are the work of some higher power. He refers to the goddess Fortuna as having spun him downward on her wheel of fortune. Ignatius loves to eat; his masturbatory fantasies lead in strange directions. His mockery of obscene images is portrayed as a defensive posture to hide their titillating effect on him. Although considering himself to have an expansive and learned worldview, Ignatius has an aversion to ever leaving the town of his birth and frequently bores friends and strangers with the story of his abortive journey out of New Orleans, to Baton Rouge on a Greyhound Scenicruiser, which Ignatius recounts as a traumatic ordeal of extreme horror.

Myrna Minkoff edit

Myrna Minkoff, referred to by Ignatius as "that minx," is a Jewish beatnik from New York City. Ignatius met her while she was in college in New Orleans.[2] Although their political, social, religious, and personal orientations could hardly be more different, Myrna and Ignatius fascinate one another. The novel refers to Myrna and Ignatius as having engaged in tag-team attacks on the teachings of professors. For most of the novel, she is seen only in the regular correspondence which the two sustain after her return to New York, a correspondence heavily weighted with sexual analysis from Myrna and contempt for her apparent sacrilegious activity by Ignatius. Officially, they deplore everything the other stands for. Although neither will admit it, their correspondence indicates that, separated though they are by half a continent, they want to impress each other.

Irene Reilly edit

Mrs. Irene Reilly is Ignatius's mother. She has been widowed for 21 years. At first, she allows Ignatius his space and drives him where he needs to go, but over the course of the novel she learns to stand up for herself. She has a drinking problem, most frequently indulging in muscatel, although Ignatius exaggerates that she is a raving, abusive drunk.[2]

She falls for Claude Robichaux, who has a railroad pension and rental properties. At the end of the novel, she decides she will marry Claude. But first, she agrees with Santa Battaglia (who has not only recently become Mrs. Reilly's new best friend, but also harbors an intense dislike for Ignatius) that Ignatius is insane and arranges to have him sent to a mental hospital.

Others edit

  • Santa Battaglia, a "grammaw" who is friends with Mrs. Reilly and has a marked disdain for Ignatius
  • Claude Robichaux, an old man constantly on the lookout for any "communiss" who might infiltrate the United States; he takes an interest in protecting Irene
  • Angelo Mancuso, an inept police officer, the nephew of Santa Battaglia, who, after an abortive attempt to arrest Ignatius as a "suspicious character," features prominently in the novel as Ignatius's self-perceived nemesis
  • Lana Lee, a pornographic model who runs the "Night of Joy," a downscale French Quarter strip club
  • George, Lana's distributor, who sells photographs of her to high-school children
  • Darlene, a goodhearted but none-too-bright girl, who aspires to be a "Night of Joy" stripper, with a pet cockatoo
  • Burma Jones, a black janitor for the "Night of Joy" who holds on to his below-minimum wage job only to avoid being arrested for vagrancy
  • Mr. Clyde, the frustrated owner of Paradise Vendors, a hot dog vendor business, who inadvisedly employs Ignatius as a vendor
  • Gus Levy, the reluctant, mostly absentee owner of Levy Pants, an inherited family business in the Bywater neighborhood where Ignatius briefly works
  • Mrs. Levy, Gus's wife, who attempts to psychoanalyze her husband and Miss Trixie despite being completely unqualified to do so
  • Miss Trixie, an aged clerk at Levy Pants who suffers from dementia and compulsive hoarding
  • Mr. Gonzalez, the meek office manager at Levy Pants
  • Dorian Greene, a flamboyant French Quarter homosexual who puts on elaborate parties
  • Frieda Club, Betty Bumper, and Liz Steele, a trio of aggressive lesbians who run afoul of Ignatius
  • Dr. Talc, a mediocre professor at Tulane who had the misfortune of teaching Myrna and Ignatius
  • Miss Annie, the disgruntled neighbor of the Reillys who professes an addiction to headache medicine

Ignatius at the movies edit

Toole provides comical descriptions of two of the films Ignatius watches without naming them; they can be recognized as Billy Rose's Jumbo and That Touch of Mink, both Doris Day features released in 1962.[6] In another passage, Ignatius declines to see another film, a "widely praised Swedish drama about a man who was losing his soul". This is most likely Ingmar Bergman's Winter Light, released in early 1963. In another passage, Irene Reilly recalls the night Ignatius was conceived: after she and her husband viewed Red Dust, released in October 1932.[7]

Confederacy and New Orleans edit

 
Canal Street, New Orleans in the late 1950s; the D. H. Holmes store at right
 
A "Lucky Dogs" cart from the era of the novel

The book is famous for its rich depiction of New Orleans and the city's dialects, including Yat.[8][9] Many locals and writers think that it is the best and most accurate depiction of the city in a work of fiction.[10]

A bronze statue of Ignatius J. Reilly can be found under the clock on the down-river side of the 800 block of Canal Street, New Orleans, the former site of the D. H. Holmes Department Store, now the Hyatt French Quarter Hotel. The statue mimics the opening scene: Ignatius waits for his mother under the D.H. Holmes clock, clutching a Werlein's shopping bag, dressed in a hunting cap, flannel shirt, baggy pants and scarf, 'studying the crowd of people for signs of bad taste.' The statue is modeled on New Orleans actor John "Spud" McConnell, who portrayed Ignatius in a stage version of the novel.

Various local businesses are mentioned in addition to D. H. Holmes, including Werlein's Music Store and local cinemas such as the Prytania Theater. Some readers from elsewhere assume Ignatius's favorite soft drink, Dr. Nut, to be fictitious, but it was an actual local soft drink brand of the era. The "Paradise Hot Dogs" vending carts are an easily recognized satire of those actually branded "Lucky Dogs".

Structure edit

The structure of A Confederacy of Dunces reflects the structure of Ignatius's favorite book, Boethius' The Consolation of Philosophy.[11] Like Boethius' book, A Confederacy of Dunces is divided into chapters that are further divided into a varying number of subchapters. Key parts of some chapters are outside of the main narrative. In Consolation, sections of narrative prose alternate with metrical verse. In Confederacy, such narrative interludes vary more widely in form and include light verse, journal entries by Ignatius, and also letters between himself and Myrna. A copy of The Consolation of Philosophy within the narrative itself also becomes an explicit plot device in several ways.

The difficult path to publication edit

As outlined in the introduction to a later revised edition, the book would never have been published if Toole's mother had not found a smeared carbon copy of the manuscript left in the house following Toole's 1969 death at 31. She was persistent despite rejections.

Thelma repeatedly telephoned Walker Percy, an author and college instructor at Loyola University New Orleans, and demanded that he read it. He initially resisted; however, as he recounts in the book's foreword:

...the lady was persistent, and it somehow came to pass that she stood in my office handing me the hefty manuscript. There was no getting out of it; only one hope remained—that I could read a few pages and that they would be bad enough for me, in good conscience, to read no farther. Usually I can do just that. Indeed the first paragraph often suffices. My only fear was that this one might not be bad enough, or might be just good enough, so that I would have to keep reading. In this case I read on. And on. First with the sinking feeling that it was not bad enough to quit, then with a prickle of interest, then a growing excitement, and finally an incredulity: surely it was not possible that it was so good.[12]

The book was published by LSU Press in 1980. It won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981. In 2005, Blackstone Audio released an unabridged audiobook of the novel, read by Barrett Whitener.

While Tulane University in New Orleans retains a collection of Toole's papers, and some early drafts have been found, the location of Toole's last manuscript is unknown.[13]

Adaptations edit

In March 1984, LSU staged a musical adaptation of the book, with book and lyrics by Frank Galati and music by Edward Zelnis; actor Scott Harlan played Ignatius.[14]

Kerry Shale read the book for BBC Radio 4's Book at Bedtime in 1982, and later adapted the book into a one-man show which he performed at the Adelaide Festival in 1990,[15] at the Gate Theatre in London, and for BBC Radio.[16]

There have been repeated attempts to turn the book into a film. In 1982, Harold Ramis was to write and direct an adaptation, starring John Belushi as Ignatius and Richard Pryor as Burma Jones, but Belushi's death prevented this. Later, John Candy and Chris Farley were touted for the lead, but both of them, like Belushi, also died at an early age, leading many to ascribe a curse to the role of Ignatius.[17]

Director John Waters was interested in directing an adaptation that would have starred Divine, who also died at an early age, as Ignatius.[18]

British performer and writer Stephen Fry was at one point commissioned to adapt Toole's book for the screen.[19] He was sent to New Orleans by Paramount Pictures in 1997 to get background for a screenplay adaptation.[20]

John Goodman, a longtime resident of New Orleans, was slated to play Ignatius at one point.[21]

A version adapted by Steven Soderbergh and Scott Kramer, and slated to be directed by David Gordon Green, was scheduled for release in 2005. The film was to star Will Ferrell as Ignatius and Lily Tomlin as Irene. A staged reading of the script took place at the 8th Nantucket Film Festival, with Ferrell as Ignatius, Anne Meara as Irene, Paul Rudd as Officer Mancuso, Kristen Johnston as Lana Lee, Mos Def as Burma Jones, Rosie Perez as Darlene, Olympia Dukakis as Santa Battaglia and Miss Trixie, Natasha Lyonne as Myrna, Alan Cumming as Dorian Greene, John Shea as Gonzales, Jesse Eisenberg as George, John Conlon as Claude Robichaux, Jace Alexander as Bartender Ben, Celia Weston as Miss Annie, Miss Inez & Mrs. Levy, and Dan Hedaya as Mr. Levy.[22]

Various reasons are cited as to why the Soderbergh version has yet to be filmed. They include disorganization and lack of interest at Paramount Pictures, the murder of Helen Hill, the head of the Louisiana State Film Commission, and the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans.[17] When asked why the film was never made, Will Ferrell has said it is a "mystery".[23]

In 2012, there was a version in negotiation with director James Bobin and potentially starring Zach Galifianakis.[24]

In a 2013 interview, Steven Soderbergh remarked "I think it's cursed. I'm not prone to superstition, but that project has got bad mojo on it."[25]

In November 2015, Huntington Theatre Company introduced a stage version of A Confederacy of Dunces written by Jeffrey Hatcher in their Avenue of the Arts/BU Theatre location in Boston, starring Nick Offerman as Ignatius J. Reilly. It set a record as the company's highest-grossing production.[26]

Critical reception edit

On November 5, 2019, BBC News included A Confederacy of Dunces on its list of the 100 most inspiring novels.[27] The book is regularly included on lists of 'most funny' or 'best comedic novel'.[28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Toole 1980.
  2. ^ a b c d Podgorski, Daniel (August 23, 2016). "Peopling Picaresque: On the Well-drawn Characters of John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces". The Gemsbok. from the original on November 30, 2016. Retrieved November 29, 2016.
  3. ^ Giemza, Bryan (Spring 2004). "Ignatius Rising: The Life of John Kennedy Toole". Southern Cultures (review). Cambridge: Chadwyck-Healey. 10 (1): 97–9. doi:10.1353/scu.2004.0007. ISSN 1534-1488. S2CID 145576623. from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2020-01-30.
  4. ^ Miller, Karl (1999-03-05). "An American tragedy. A lifetime of rejection broke John Kennedy Toole. But his aged mother believed in his talent, found a publisher for his novel and rescued his memory from oblivion". www.newstatesman.com. from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  5. ^ Lowe, John (December 2008). Louisiana culture from the colonial era to Katrina. LSU Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-8071-3337-8. Retrieved 15 March 2011.
  6. ^ Patteson, Richard F (1982), "Ignatius Goes to the Movies: The Films in Toole's 'A Confederacy of Dunces'", NMAL: Notes on Modern American Literature, 6 (2), item 14.
  7. ^ Toole 1980, p. 136.
  8. ^ Nagle, Stephen J; Sanders, Sara L (2003). English in the southern United States. Cambridge University Press. p. 181.
  9. ^ Heilman, Heather; DeMocker, Michael (November 26, 2001). . Tulanian. Tulane University. Archived from the original on 2010-06-06. Retrieved 2010-02-05.
  10. ^ Miller, Elizabeth 'Liz'. . Bookslut. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  11. ^ Toole, John Kennedy; Percy, Walker (1980). A confederacy of dunces. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 288. ISBN 0807106577. OCLC 5336849.
  12. ^ Percy, Walker (1980), Preface in Toole 1980.
  13. ^ MacLauchlin, Cory (March 26, 2012). "The Lost Manuscript to 'A Confederacy of Dunces'" (online magazine). The Millions. from the original on April 28, 2012. Retrieved 2012-04-18.
  14. ^ "Confederacy Of Dunces Play May Wind Up On Broadway" (PDF). Digitallibrary.tulane.edu. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  15. ^ Toole, John Kennedy; Shale, Kerry (15 January 1990). "A confederacy of dunces: [theatre program], 1990 Adelaide Festival" – via Trove.
  16. ^ "Actor". Kerryshale.com. 16 April 2015. from the original on 4 April 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
  17. ^ a b Hyman, Peter (December 14, 2006). "The development hell of 'A Confederacy of Dunces'". Slate. from the original on 22 January 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-29.
  18. ^ Allman, Kevin. . Gambit New Orleans News and Entertainment. Best of New Orleans. Archived from the original (interview) on 2010-06-12. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  19. ^ Fry, Stephen (2005-09-06). . Huffington Post. Archived from the original on 2009-09-15. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  20. ^ Fry, Stephen (2008), Stephen Fry in America, Harper Collins, p. 138.
  21. ^ Fretts, Bruce (19 May 2000). "A Confederacy of Dunces celebrates its 20th anniversary". Entertainment Weekly. from the original on 23 August 2015. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  22. ^ Head, Steve (2003-06-25). . IGN. Archived from the original on September 11, 2005. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  23. ^ Stephenson, Hunter (February 29, 2008). . Slashfilm. Archived from the original on 2009-01-24. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  24. ^ Brodesser-Akner, Claude (2012-05-22), "Exclusive: 'Dunces' Finds Its Ignatius in Galifianakis", Vulture, from the original on 2012-06-14, retrieved 2012-06-09.
  25. ^ "Soderbergh in Vulture". Vulture.com. from the original on July 3, 2013. Retrieved January 30, 2013.
  26. ^ Shanahan, Mark (23 December 2015). "'Confederacy of Dunces' sets Huntington Theatre record". The Boston Globe. from the original on 24 October 2016. Retrieved 21 June 2017.
  27. ^ "100 'most inspiring' novels revealed by BBC Arts". BBC News. 2019-11-05. from the original on 2019-11-08. Retrieved 2019-11-10. The reveal kickstarts the BBC's year-long celebration of literature.
  28. ^ "Book Reconsideration: "A Confederacy of Dunces" - Still an American Comic Masterpiece?". 29 June 2020.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Clark, William Bedford (1987), "All Toole's children: A reading of 'A Confederacy of Dunces'", Essays in Literature, 14: 269–80.
  • Dunne, Sara L (2005), "Moviegoing in the Modern Novel: Holden, Binx, Ignatius", Studies in Popular Culture, 28 (1): 37–47.
  • Kline, Michael (1999), "Narrating the Grotesque: The Rhetoric of Humor in John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces", Southern Quarterly, 37 (3–4): 283–91.
  • Leighton, H Vernon (2007–2012), John Kennedy Toole Research, Winona, three scholarly articles (including one free full text) and other materials.
  • Lowe, John (2008), "The Carnival Voices of 'A Confederacy of Dunces'", Louisiana Culture from the Colonial Era to Katrina, Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State UP, pp. 159–90.
  • MacLauchlin, Cory (2012), Butterfly in the Typewriter: The Tragic Life of John Kennedy Toole and the Remarkable Story of A Confederacy of Dunces (biography), Da Capo Press, ISBN 978-0-306-82040-3 (literary analysis, chapter 15).
  • Marsh, Leslie (2013), "Critical notice of Butterfly in the Typewriter: The Tragic Life of John Kennedy Toole and the Remarkable Story of A Confederacy of Dunces" (review), Journal of Mind and Behavior, ISSN 0271-0137
  • Marsh, Leslie (2020), Theology and Geometry: Essays on John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces (book), Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 978-1-4985-8547-7
  • McNeil, David (1984), "A Confederacy of Dunces as Reverse Satire: The American Subgenre", Mississippi Quarterly, 38: 33–47.
  • Palumbo, Carmine D (1995), "John Kennedy Toole and His Confederacy of Dunces", Louisiana Folklore Miscellany, 10: 59–77.
  • Patteson, Richard F; Sauret, Thomas (1983), "The Consolation of Illusion: John Kennedy Toole's 'A Confederacy of Dunces'", Texas Review, 4 (1–2): 77–87.
  • Pugh, Tison (2006), "'It's Prolly Fulla Dirty Stories': Masturbatory Allegory and Queer Medievalism in John Kennedy Toole's 'A Confederacy of Dunces'", Studies in Medievalism, 15: 77–100.
  • Rudnicki, Robert (2009), "Euphues and the Anatomy of Influence: John Lyly, Harold Bloom, James Olney, and the Construction of John Kennedy Toole's Ignatius", Mississippi Quarterly, 62 (1–2): 281–302.
  • Simmons, Jonathan (1989), "Ignatius Reilly and the Concept of the Grotesque in John Kennedy Toole's 'A Confederacy of Dunces'", Mississippi Quarterly, 43 (1): 33–43.
  • Simon, Richard K (1994), "John Kennedy Toole and Walker Percy: Fiction and Repetition in A Confederacy of Dunces", Texas Studies in Literature & Language, 36 (1): 99–116, JSTOR 40755032.
  • Zaenker, Karl A (1987), "Hrotsvit and the Moderns: Her Impact on John Kennedy Toole and Peter Hacks", in Wilson, Katharina M (ed.), Hrotsvit of Gandersheim: Rara Avis in Saxonia?, Ann Arbor, Michigan: Marc, pp. 275–85.

External links edit

  • "John Kennedy Toole" (review), Spike. Written when the latest film adaptation was still scheduled to go ahead.
  • "A Conspiracy of Dunces", Slate, 14 December 2006 on the problems plaguing the film adaptation.
  • PPrize (photos) of first edition Confederacy of Dunces.
  • ignatius' ghost. A tour of Confederacy locations.

confederacy, dunces, novel, american, writer, john, kennedy, toole, that, published, 1980, years, after, toole, death, published, through, efforts, writer, walker, percy, contributed, foreword, toole, mother, thelma, book, became, first, cult, classic, then, m. A Confederacy of Dunces is a novel by American writer John Kennedy Toole that was published in 1980 11 years after Toole s death 2 Published through the efforts of writer Walker Percy who contributed a foreword and Toole s mother Thelma the book became first a cult classic then a mainstream success it earned Toole a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981 and is now a canonical work of modern literature of the Southern United States 3 A Confederacy of DuncesAuthorJohn Kennedy TooleCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreComedy tragicomedyPublished1980PublisherLouisiana State University PressMedia typePrint hardback amp paperback audiobook e bookPages405 paperback 1 AwardPulitzer Prize 1981 ISBN0 8071 0657 7OCLC5336849Dewey Decimal813 5 4LC ClassPS3570 O54 C66 1980The book s title refers to an epigram from Jonathan Swift s essay Thoughts on Various Subjects Moral and Diverting When a true genius appears in the world you may know him by this sign that the dunces are all in confederacy against him Dunces is a picaresque novel featuring the misadventures of protagonist Ignatius J Reilly a lazy obese misanthropic self styled scholar He is an educated but slothful 30 year old living with his mother in the Uptown neighborhood of early 1960s New Orleans In his quest for employment he has adventures with colorful French Quarter characters Toole wrote the first draft in 1963 during his last few months in Puerto Rico Critics liked the accurate depictions of New Orleans dialects Toole based Reilly in part on his professor friend Bob Byrne Byrne s slovenly eccentric behavior was anything but professorial Reilly resembled Toole Toole s experiences served as inspiration for episodes While at Tulane University Toole filled in for a friend as a hot tamale cart vendor and worked for a family who owned and operated a clothing factory Contents 1 Synopsis 2 Major characters 2 1 Ignatius J Reilly 2 2 Myrna Minkoff 2 3 Irene Reilly 2 4 Others 3 Ignatius at the movies 4 Confederacy and New Orleans 5 Structure 6 The difficult path to publication 7 Adaptations 8 Critical reception 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksSynopsis editIgnatius Jacques Reilly is an overweight and unemployed 30 year old with a master s degree in Medieval History He lives with his mother Irene Reilly He loathes the world which he feels has lost the values of geometry and theology One afternoon Reilly s mother drives him downtown in the old Plymouth and while she was at the doctor s seeing about her arthritis Ignatius had bought some sheet music at Werlein s for his trumpet and a new string for his lute While Reilly waits for his mother Officer Angelo Mancuso approaches Reilly and demands that Ignatius produce identification Affronted and outraged by Mancuso s zeal and officiousness Reilly protests his innocence to the crowd while denouncing the city s vices and the graft of the local police An elderly man Claude Robichaux takes Reilly s side and denounces Mancuso and the police as communists In the resulting uproar Mancuso arrests Robichaux while Reilly and his embarrassed mother escape and take refuge in a bar There Mrs Reilly drinks too much On the way home she crashes her car The bills for the accident total 1 020 a sizable amount of money in early 1960s New Orleans and which would be a little over 10 000 in 2023 To help his mother pay for the accident Ignatius must work for the first time in years What follows is a series of adventures that introduce characters and their interactions as Ignatius flounders from one low wage job to another Ignatius obsesses over his wardrobe verbally abuses his mother and frequents movie theaters where he condemns the actors and actresses The novel explores the psyche of a man who every time he feels stress observes the action of his pyloric valve Reilly maintains an adversarial relationship and possibly a flirtation with the politically liberal Myrna Minkoff his only friend from college Major characters editIgnatius J Reilly edit Ignatius Jacques Reilly is something of a modern Don Quixote eccentric idealistic and creative sometimes to the point of delusion 2 In his foreword to the book Walker Percy describes Ignatius as a slob extraordinary a mad Oliver Hardy a fat Don Quixote a perverse Thomas Aquinas rolled into one He disdains modernity particularly pop culture The disdain becomes his obsession he goes to movies in order to mock their perversity and express his outrage with the contemporary world s lack of theology and geometry He prefers the scholastic philosophy of the Middle Ages and the Early Medieval philosopher Boethius in particular 4 However he also enjoys many modern comforts and conveniences and is given to claiming that the rednecks of rural Louisiana hate all modern technology which they associate with unwanted change The workings of his pyloric valve play an important role in his life reacting strongly to incidents in a fashion that he likens to Cassandra in terms of prophetic significance 5 Ignatius believes he does not belong in the world and that his failings are the work of some higher power He refers to the goddess Fortuna as having spun him downward on her wheel of fortune Ignatius loves to eat his masturbatory fantasies lead in strange directions His mockery of obscene images is portrayed as a defensive posture to hide their titillating effect on him Although considering himself to have an expansive and learned worldview Ignatius has an aversion to ever leaving the town of his birth and frequently bores friends and strangers with the story of his abortive journey out of New Orleans to Baton Rouge on a Greyhound Scenicruiser which Ignatius recounts as a traumatic ordeal of extreme horror Myrna Minkoff edit Myrna Minkoff referred to by Ignatius as that minx is a Jewish beatnik from New York City Ignatius met her while she was in college in New Orleans 2 Although their political social religious and personal orientations could hardly be more different Myrna and Ignatius fascinate one another The novel refers to Myrna and Ignatius as having engaged in tag team attacks on the teachings of professors For most of the novel she is seen only in the regular correspondence which the two sustain after her return to New York a correspondence heavily weighted with sexual analysis from Myrna and contempt for her apparent sacrilegious activity by Ignatius Officially they deplore everything the other stands for Although neither will admit it their correspondence indicates that separated though they are by half a continent they want to impress each other Irene Reilly edit Mrs Irene Reilly is Ignatius s mother She has been widowed for 21 years At first she allows Ignatius his space and drives him where he needs to go but over the course of the novel she learns to stand up for herself She has a drinking problem most frequently indulging in muscatel although Ignatius exaggerates that she is a raving abusive drunk 2 She falls for Claude Robichaux who has a railroad pension and rental properties At the end of the novel she decides she will marry Claude But first she agrees with Santa Battaglia who has not only recently become Mrs Reilly s new best friend but also harbors an intense dislike for Ignatius that Ignatius is insane and arranges to have him sent to a mental hospital Others edit Santa Battaglia a grammaw who is friends with Mrs Reilly and has a marked disdain for Ignatius Claude Robichaux an old man constantly on the lookout for any communiss who might infiltrate the United States he takes an interest in protecting Irene Angelo Mancuso an inept police officer the nephew of Santa Battaglia who after an abortive attempt to arrest Ignatius as a suspicious character features prominently in the novel as Ignatius s self perceived nemesis Lana Lee a pornographic model who runs the Night of Joy a downscale French Quarter strip club George Lana s distributor who sells photographs of her to high school children Darlene a goodhearted but none too bright girl who aspires to be a Night of Joy stripper with a pet cockatoo Burma Jones a black janitor for the Night of Joy who holds on to his below minimum wage job only to avoid being arrested for vagrancy Mr Clyde the frustrated owner of Paradise Vendors a hot dog vendor business who inadvisedly employs Ignatius as a vendor Gus Levy the reluctant mostly absentee owner of Levy Pants an inherited family business in the Bywater neighborhood where Ignatius briefly works Mrs Levy Gus s wife who attempts to psychoanalyze her husband and Miss Trixie despite being completely unqualified to do so Miss Trixie an aged clerk at Levy Pants who suffers from dementia and compulsive hoarding Mr Gonzalez the meek office manager at Levy Pants Dorian Greene a flamboyant French Quarter homosexual who puts on elaborate parties Frieda Club Betty Bumper and Liz Steele a trio of aggressive lesbians who run afoul of Ignatius Dr Talc a mediocre professor at Tulane who had the misfortune of teaching Myrna and Ignatius Miss Annie the disgruntled neighbor of the Reillys who professes an addiction to headache medicineIgnatius at the movies editToole provides comical descriptions of two of the films Ignatius watches without naming them they can be recognized as Billy Rose s Jumbo and That Touch of Mink both Doris Day features released in 1962 6 In another passage Ignatius declines to see another film a widely praised Swedish drama about a man who was losing his soul This is most likely Ingmar Bergman s Winter Light released in early 1963 In another passage Irene Reilly recalls the night Ignatius was conceived after she and her husband viewed Red Dust released in October 1932 7 Confederacy and New Orleans edit nbsp Canal Street New Orleans in the late 1950s the D H Holmes store at right nbsp A Lucky Dogs cart from the era of the novelThe book is famous for its rich depiction of New Orleans and the city s dialects including Yat 8 9 Many locals and writers think that it is the best and most accurate depiction of the city in a work of fiction 10 A bronze statue of Ignatius J Reilly can be found under the clock on the down river side of the 800 block of Canal Street New Orleans the former site of the D H Holmes Department Store now the Hyatt French Quarter Hotel The statue mimics the opening scene Ignatius waits for his mother under the D H Holmes clock clutching a Werlein s shopping bag dressed in a hunting cap flannel shirt baggy pants and scarf studying the crowd of people for signs of bad taste The statue is modeled on New Orleans actor John Spud McConnell who portrayed Ignatius in a stage version of the novel Various local businesses are mentioned in addition to D H Holmes including Werlein s Music Store and local cinemas such as the Prytania Theater Some readers from elsewhere assume Ignatius s favorite soft drink Dr Nut to be fictitious but it was an actual local soft drink brand of the era The Paradise Hot Dogs vending carts are an easily recognized satire of those actually branded Lucky Dogs Structure editThe structure of A Confederacy of Dunces reflects the structure of Ignatius s favorite book Boethius The Consolation of Philosophy 11 Like Boethius book A Confederacy of Dunces is divided into chapters that are further divided into a varying number of subchapters Key parts of some chapters are outside of the main narrative In Consolation sections of narrative prose alternate with metrical verse In Confederacy such narrative interludes vary more widely in form and include light verse journal entries by Ignatius and also letters between himself and Myrna A copy of The Consolation of Philosophy within the narrative itself also becomes an explicit plot device in several ways The difficult path to publication editAs outlined in the introduction to a later revised edition the book would never have been published if Toole s mother had not found a smeared carbon copy of the manuscript left in the house following Toole s 1969 death at 31 She was persistent despite rejections Thelma repeatedly telephoned Walker Percy an author and college instructor at Loyola University New Orleans and demanded that he read it He initially resisted however as he recounts in the book s foreword the lady was persistent and it somehow came to pass that she stood in my office handing me the hefty manuscript There was no getting out of it only one hope remained that I could read a few pages and that they would be bad enough for me in good conscience to read no farther Usually I can do just that Indeed the first paragraph often suffices My only fear was that this one might not be bad enough or might be just good enough so that I would have to keep reading In this case I read on And on First with the sinking feeling that it was not bad enough to quit then with a prickle of interest then a growing excitement and finally an incredulity surely it was not possible that it was so good 12 The book was published by LSU Press in 1980 It won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981 In 2005 Blackstone Audio released an unabridged audiobook of the novel read by Barrett Whitener While Tulane University in New Orleans retains a collection of Toole s papers and some early drafts have been found the location of Toole s last manuscript is unknown 13 Adaptations editIn March 1984 LSU staged a musical adaptation of the book with book and lyrics by Frank Galati and music by Edward Zelnis actor Scott Harlan played Ignatius 14 Kerry Shale read the book for BBC Radio 4 s Book at Bedtime in 1982 and later adapted the book into a one man show which he performed at the Adelaide Festival in 1990 15 at the Gate Theatre in London and for BBC Radio 16 There have been repeated attempts to turn the book into a film In 1982 Harold Ramis was to write and direct an adaptation starring John Belushi as Ignatius and Richard Pryor as Burma Jones but Belushi s death prevented this Later John Candy and Chris Farley were touted for the lead but both of them like Belushi also died at an early age leading many to ascribe a curse to the role of Ignatius 17 Director John Waters was interested in directing an adaptation that would have starred Divine who also died at an early age as Ignatius 18 British performer and writer Stephen Fry was at one point commissioned to adapt Toole s book for the screen 19 He was sent to New Orleans by Paramount Pictures in 1997 to get background for a screenplay adaptation 20 John Goodman a longtime resident of New Orleans was slated to play Ignatius at one point 21 A version adapted by Steven Soderbergh and Scott Kramer and slated to be directed by David Gordon Green was scheduled for release in 2005 The film was to star Will Ferrell as Ignatius and Lily Tomlin as Irene A staged reading of the script took place at the 8th Nantucket Film Festival with Ferrell as Ignatius Anne Meara as Irene Paul Rudd as Officer Mancuso Kristen Johnston as Lana Lee Mos Def as Burma Jones Rosie Perez as Darlene Olympia Dukakis as Santa Battaglia and Miss Trixie Natasha Lyonne as Myrna Alan Cumming as Dorian Greene John Shea as Gonzales Jesse Eisenberg as George John Conlon as Claude Robichaux Jace Alexander as Bartender Ben Celia Weston as Miss Annie Miss Inez amp Mrs Levy and Dan Hedaya as Mr Levy 22 Various reasons are cited as to why the Soderbergh version has yet to be filmed They include disorganization and lack of interest at Paramount Pictures the murder of Helen Hill the head of the Louisiana State Film Commission and the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans 17 When asked why the film was never made Will Ferrell has said it is a mystery 23 In 2012 there was a version in negotiation with director James Bobin and potentially starring Zach Galifianakis 24 In a 2013 interview Steven Soderbergh remarked I think it s cursed I m not prone to superstition but that project has got bad mojo on it 25 In November 2015 Huntington Theatre Company introduced a stage version of A Confederacy of Dunces written by Jeffrey Hatcher in their Avenue of the Arts BU Theatre location in Boston starring Nick Offerman as Ignatius J Reilly It set a record as the company s highest grossing production 26 Critical reception editOn November 5 2019 BBC News included A Confederacy of Dunces on its list of the 100 most inspiring novels 27 The book is regularly included on lists of most funny or best comedic novel 28 See also edit nbsp Novels portalList of works published posthumously Development hellReferences edit Toole 1980 a b c d Podgorski Daniel August 23 2016 Peopling Picaresque On the Well drawn Characters of John Kennedy Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces The Gemsbok Archived from the original on November 30 2016 Retrieved November 29 2016 Giemza Bryan Spring 2004 Ignatius Rising The Life of John Kennedy Toole Southern Cultures review Cambridge Chadwyck Healey 10 1 97 9 doi 10 1353 scu 2004 0007 ISSN 1534 1488 S2CID 145576623 Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2020 01 30 Miller Karl 1999 03 05 An American tragedy A lifetime of rejection broke John Kennedy Toole But his aged mother believed in his talent found a publisher for his novel and rescued his memory from oblivion www newstatesman com Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2018 06 09 Lowe John December 2008 Louisiana culture from the colonial era to Katrina LSU Press p 164 ISBN 978 0 8071 3337 8 Retrieved 15 March 2011 Patteson Richard F 1982 Ignatius Goes to the Movies The Films in Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces NMAL Notes on Modern American Literature 6 2 item 14 Toole 1980 p 136 Nagle Stephen J Sanders Sara L 2003 English in the southern United States Cambridge University Press p 181 Heilman Heather DeMocker Michael November 26 2001 Ignatius Comes of Age Tulanian Tulane University Archived from the original on 2010 06 06 Retrieved 2010 02 05 Miller Elizabeth Liz An Interview with Poppy Z Brite Bookslut Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 2011 08 01 Toole John Kennedy Percy Walker 1980 A confederacy of dunces Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press pp 288 ISBN 0807106577 OCLC 5336849 Percy Walker 1980 Preface in Toole 1980 MacLauchlin Cory March 26 2012 The Lost Manuscript to A Confederacy of Dunces online magazine The Millions Archived from the original on April 28 2012 Retrieved 2012 04 18 Confederacy Of Dunces Play May Wind Up On Broadway PDF Digitallibrary tulane edu Retrieved 15 January 2019 Toole John Kennedy Shale Kerry 15 January 1990 A confederacy of dunces theatre program 1990 Adelaide Festival via Trove Actor Kerryshale com 16 April 2015 Archived from the original on 4 April 2018 Retrieved 1 April 2018 a b Hyman Peter December 14 2006 The development hell of A Confederacy of Dunces Slate Archived from the original on 22 January 2009 Retrieved 2009 01 29 Allman Kevin John Waters Gambit New Orleans News and Entertainment Best of New Orleans Archived from the original interview on 2010 06 12 Retrieved 2011 08 01 Fry Stephen 2005 09 06 The great stink of 2005 Huffington Post Archived from the original on 2009 09 15 Retrieved 2011 08 01 Fry Stephen 2008 Stephen Fry in America Harper Collins p 138 Fretts Bruce 19 May 2000 A Confederacy of Dunces celebrates its 20th anniversary Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 23 August 2015 Retrieved 25 July 2015 Head Steve 2003 06 25 Photos Staged Reading of A Confederacy of Dunces IGN Archived from the original on September 11 2005 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Stephenson Hunter February 29 2008 Will Ferrell Talks Land of the Lost Old School 2 Elf 2 and A Confederacy of Dunces Slashfilm Archived from the original on 2009 01 24 Retrieved January 19 2022 Brodesser Akner Claude 2012 05 22 Exclusive Dunces Finds Its Ignatius in Galifianakis Vulture archived from the original on 2012 06 14 retrieved 2012 06 09 Soderbergh in Vulture Vulture com Archived from the original on July 3 2013 Retrieved January 30 2013 Shanahan Mark 23 December 2015 Confederacy of Dunces sets Huntington Theatre record The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 24 October 2016 Retrieved 21 June 2017 100 most inspiring novels revealed by BBC Arts BBC News 2019 11 05 Archived from the original on 2019 11 08 Retrieved 2019 11 10 The reveal kickstarts the BBC s year long celebration of literature Book Reconsideration A Confederacy of Dunces Still an American Comic Masterpiece 29 June 2020 Sources editToole John Kennedy 1980 A Confederacy of Dunces LSU Press ISBN 0 8021 3020 8Further reading editClark William Bedford 1987 All Toole s children A reading of A Confederacy of Dunces Essays in Literature 14 269 80 Dunne Sara L 2005 Moviegoing in the Modern Novel Holden Binx Ignatius Studies in Popular Culture 28 1 37 47 Kline Michael 1999 Narrating the Grotesque The Rhetoric of Humor in John Kennedy Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces Southern Quarterly 37 3 4 283 91 Leighton H Vernon 2007 2012 John Kennedy Toole Research Winona three scholarly articles including one free full text and other materials Lowe John 2008 The Carnival Voices of A Confederacy of Dunces Louisiana Culture from the Colonial Era to Katrina Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State UP pp 159 90 MacLauchlin Cory 2012 Butterfly in the Typewriter The Tragic Life of John Kennedy Toole and the Remarkable Story of A Confederacy of Dunces biography Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 82040 3 literary analysis chapter 15 Marsh Leslie 2013 Critical notice of Butterfly in the Typewriter The Tragic Life of John Kennedy Toole and the Remarkable Story of A Confederacy of Dunces review Journal of Mind and Behavior ISSN 0271 0137 Marsh Leslie 2020 Theology and Geometry Essays on John Kennedy Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces book Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4985 8547 7 McNeil David 1984 A Confederacy of Dunces as Reverse Satire The American Subgenre Mississippi Quarterly 38 33 47 Palumbo Carmine D 1995 John Kennedy Toole and His Confederacy of Dunces Louisiana Folklore Miscellany 10 59 77 Patteson Richard F Sauret Thomas 1983 The Consolation of Illusion John Kennedy Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces Texas Review 4 1 2 77 87 Pugh Tison 2006 It s Prolly Fulla Dirty Stories Masturbatory Allegory and Queer Medievalism in John Kennedy Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces Studies in Medievalism 15 77 100 Rudnicki Robert 2009 Euphues and the Anatomy of Influence John Lyly Harold Bloom James Olney and the Construction of John Kennedy Toole s Ignatius Mississippi Quarterly 62 1 2 281 302 Simmons Jonathan 1989 Ignatius Reilly and the Concept of the Grotesque in John Kennedy Toole s A Confederacy of Dunces Mississippi Quarterly 43 1 33 43 Simon Richard K 1994 John Kennedy Toole and Walker Percy Fiction and Repetition in A Confederacy of Dunces Texas Studies in Literature amp Language 36 1 99 116 JSTOR 40755032 Zaenker Karl A 1987 Hrotsvit and the Moderns Her Impact on John Kennedy Toole and Peter Hacks in Wilson Katharina M ed Hrotsvit of Gandersheim Rara Avis in Saxonia Ann Arbor Michigan Marc pp 275 85 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to A Confederacy of Dunces John Kennedy Toole review Spike Written when the latest film adaptation was still scheduled to go ahead A Conspiracy of Dunces Slate 14 December 2006 on the problems plaguing the film adaptation PPrize photos of first edition Confederacy of Dunces ignatius ghost A tour of Confederacy locations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Confederacy of Dunces amp oldid 1195942688, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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