I include this Internet link to Finnegans Wake on-line.
Having said that my 'future language' experiences are somewhat like Joyce's
language, this is with the qualification of saying that the experience is of
something even stranger and more 'other'. It's heard at a faster rate
than it would be possible to read, and multi-track, with many streams
babbling at the same time. Also there's a higher percentage of co-joined
apparently nonsense sounding words and less seeming narrative. If you are
familiar with Joyce's work, you may ask, "what narrative?" Well,
even though Joyce was obviously on to something way ahead of its time, the book
is still bound by narrative convention by comparison. One still can't help reading it
and trying to make sense of it, beginning, middle and end. I'm sure if
Joyce were alive now he would be writing in hypertext.