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High Modernism

A page dedicated to James Joyce and Ulysses.

About Me

JAMES JOYCE (1882-1941)Joyce was born at 41 Brighton Square, Rathgar, Dublin,on 2 February 1882. His father invested unwisely, and the family's fortunes declined steadily. Joyce graduated from University College, Dublin, in 1902; he briefly studied medicine in Paris, but his mother's impending death brought him back to Dublin.In 1904, Joyce began Stephen Hero, which he later re-worked as A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. He also met Nora Barnacle, a chambermaid, and on 16 June 1904 they went walking at Ringsend, at the Liffey's mouth; Joyce later chose that date for the events recorded in Ulysses. Having briefly shared a Martello tower at Sandycove, Co Dublin, with Oliver StJohn Gogarty, he sailed from Dublin with Nora in October 1904. Joyce found work in a language school in Trieste. In 1909, he made two trips to Dublin, to arrange publication of Dubliners, and to open a short-lived cinema. His last visit was in 1912, when he failed to overcome his publisher's doubts about Dubliners. In 1914 the book was published in England, and A Portrait was serialized in a London magazine.With the outbreak of World War I, Joyce moved to Zurich in neutral Switzerland, where in 1917 he underwent the first of many operations for glaucoma. Ulysses, his masterpiece, was serialized in New York in 1918-20, but was eventually halted by a court action.Joyce returned to Trieste in 1919, then moved to Paris, where in 1922 Ulysses was published by Sylvia Beach, owner of a celebrated bookshop. Its portrait of Dublin, and of the Jewish advertisement canvasser Leopold Bloom, revolutionized the novel with its 'stream of consciousness' technique; it was not published in Britain until 1936. In 1923, Joyce began the almost impenetrable Finnegans Wake, which was published in 1939. Joyce and Nora finally married in 1931, and in 1940 returned to Zurich, where he died on 13 January 1941.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 7/27/2006
Band Website: bway.net/%7Ehunger/ulysses.html
Band Members:
Influences: Henrik Ibsen, Aristotle, St. Thomas Aquinas, Charles Stewart Parnell, William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, Homer, Arthur Symons, John Stanislaus Joyce, Gustav Flaubert, Nora Barnacle, Giambattista Vico, Italo Svevo, William Blake, Ezra Pound, Leo Tolstoy, Giordano Bruno, George Moore, Percy Shelley, Dante Alighieri, John Henry Cardinal Newman, WB Yeats, Friedrich Nietzsche, Mathew Arnold, Sylvia Beach, John Millington Synge, Denis Florence MacCarthy, Marcel Proust. . .
Record Label: Shakespeare and Co. / Sylvia Beach
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

...all fecund in its nuttiness...

Not the most flattering impersonation of Joyce, but amusing... ...
Posted by High Modernism on Wed, 06 Jun 2007 11:42:00 PST

Shadows By The Film Folk

Shadows By The Film Folk Add to My Profile | More Videos...
Posted by High Modernism on Tue, 13 Mar 2007 01:41:00 PST

Some Unsolicited Advice for Uninitiated Readers

A friend once asked for some advice on reading Ulysses.  I kept the informal letter I sent to her, and I am offering it now to uninitiated readers interested in picking up Joyce's greatest work....
Posted by High Modernism on Wed, 01 Nov 2006 05:41:00 PST

Famous quotes from Ulysses

Famous quotes from Ulysses (1922), by James Joyce.   Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the stairhead, bearing a bowl of lather on which a mirror and a razor lay crossed. A yellow dressinggow...
Posted by High Modernism on Sat, 29 Jul 2006 04:00:00 PST

Book Quiz

You're Ulysses! by James Joyce Most people are convinced that you don't make any sense, but compared to what else you could say, what you're saying now makes tons of sense. What people do understa...
Posted by High Modernism on Fri, 23 Mar 2007 11:16:00 PST