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James Joyce

James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (February 2, 1882 – January 13, 1941) was an expatriate Irish writer and poet, widely considered a significant writer of the 20th century. He is best known for his short story collection Dubliners (1914), and his novels A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), Ulysses (1922) and Finnegans Wake (1939).

Although most of his adult life was spent outside the country, Joyce's Irish experiences are essential to his writings and provide all of the settings for his fiction and much of their subject matter. His fictional universe is firmly rooted in Dublin and reflects his family life and the events and friends (and enemies) from his school and college days. In this, he became both one of the most cosmopolitan and one of the most local of all the great English language modernists.

Early life

James Joyce was born into a well-off Catholic family in the Dublin suburb of Rathgar. He was the eldest surviving child; two of his siblings died of typhoid. His father's family, originally from Cork, were wealthy merchants. In 1887, his father, John Stanislaus Joyce, was appointed rate collector by Dublin Corporation; the family subsequently moved to the fashionable new suburb of Bray. Although many of Joyce's works illustrate the rich tradition of the Catholic Church, his short story "Araby" displays his discontedness and loss of faith with the Church.

In 1891, James wrote a poem, Et Tu Healy, on the death of Charles Stewart Parnell. His father had it printed and even sent a copy to the Vatican Library. In November of that same year, John Joyce was entered in Stubbs Gazette (an official register of bankruptcies) and suspended from work. In 1893 John Joyce was dismissed with a pension. This was the beginning of a slide into poverty for the family, mainly due to John's drinking and general financial mismanagement. John Joyce was the model for the character of Simon Daedalus in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Ulysses, as well as several characters in Dubliners.

James Joyce was initially educated at Clongowes Wood College, a boarding school in County Kildare, which he entered in 1888 but had to leave in 1892 when his father could no longer pay the fees. Joyce then studied at home and briefly at the Christian Brothers school on North Richmond Street before he was offered a place in the Jesuits' Dublin school, Belvedere College, in 1893. The offer was made at least partly in the hope that he would prove to have a vocation and join the Jesuits himself. Joyce, however, would reject Catholicism by the age of 16, although the philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas would remain a strong influence on him throughout his life.

He enrolled at University College Dublin in 1898. He studied modern languages, specifically English, French and Italian. He also became active in theatrical and literary circles in the city. His review of Ibsen's New Drama was published in 1900 and resulted in a letter of thanks from the Norwegian dramatist himself. Joyce wrote a number of other articles and at least two plays (since lost) during this period. Many of the friends he made at University College would appear as characters in Joyce's written works.

Exile and early writings

After graduating from UCD, Joyce left for Paris; supposedly to study medicine, but instead to squander money his family could not afford. He returned to Ireland after a few months, when his mother was diagnosed with cancer. After she died he began to drink heavily, and conditions at home grew quite appalling. He scraped a living reviewing books, teaching and singing. In January of the next year he wrote A Portrait of the Artist, an essay-story dealing with aesthetics, in a day, only to have it rejected from the free-thinking magazine Dana. He decided, on his twenty-second birthday, to revise the story and turn it into a novel he planned to call Stephen Hero. The same year he met Nora Barnacle, a young woman from Connemara, County Galway who was working as a chambermaid. On June 16, 1904, they went on their first date, an event which would be commemorated by providing the date for the action of Ulysses. Joyce remained in Dublin for some time longer, drinking heavily. He took up with medical student Oliver St John Gogarty, who formed the basis for the character Buck Mulligan in Ulysses. After staying in Gogarty's Martello Tower for six nights he left following an altercation, got drunk in a brothel and got into a fight, from which he was rescued by his father's acquaintance, Alfred Hunter, an Irish Jew who provided the model for Leopold Bloom, who is one of the protagonists of Ulysses.

Shortly thereafter he eloped with Nora. The pair went into self-imposed exile, moving first to Pola and then Trieste in Austria-Hungary to teach English. One of his students in Trieste was Ettore Schmitz; they met in 1907 and became lasting friends and mutual critics. Joyce would spend most of the rest of his life on the Continent. In 1915 he moved to Zurich, and returned to Paris in 1920 where, apart from two visits to Ireland, he remained for the next twenty years. He returned to Zurich only shortly before his death. In Paris, Maria and Eugene Jolas nursed Joyce during his long years of writing Finnegans Wake. Were it not for their unwavering support, there is a good possibility the book might never have been finished or published. In their now legendary literary magazine "transition," the Jolases published serially various sections of Joyce's novel under the title Work in Progress.

Dubliners and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

Joyce's Irish experiences are essential to his writings, and provide all of the settings for his fiction and much of their subject matter. The early volume of short stories, Dubliners, is a penetrating analysis of the stagnation and paralysis of Dublin society. The stories incorporate epiphanies, a word used particularly by Joyce, by which he meant a sudden consciousness of the "soul" of a thing.

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is a nearly complete rewrite of the abandoned Stephen Hero novel. It is largely autobiographical, showing the process of attaining maturity and self-consciousness by a gifted young man. The main character is Stephen Dedalus, Joyce's representation of himself. In this novel, some glimpses of Joyce's later techniques are evident, in the use of interior monologue and in the concern with the psychic rather than external reality.

Exiles and poetry

Despite early interest in the theatre, Joyce published only one play, Exiles, begun shortly after the outbreak of World War I in 1914 and published in 1918. A study of a husband and wife relationship, the play looks back to The Dead (the final story in Dubliners) and forward to Ulysses, which was begun around the time of the play's composition.

Joyce also published a number of books of poetry. His first mature published work was the satirical broadside The Holy Office (1904), in which he proclaimed himself to be the superior of many prominent members of the Celtic revival. His first full-length poetry collection Chamber Music (named after the sound of urine hitting the side of a chamber pot) consisted of 36 short lyrics. This publication led to his inclusion in the Imagist Anthology, edited by Ezra Pound, who was a champion for Joyce. The other poetry Joyce published in his lifetime consists of Gas From A Burner (1912), Pomes Penyeach (1927) and Ecce Puer, written in 1932 to mark the near death of his father and birth of his grandson. It was published in Collected Poems (1936).

Ulysses

Early publishing history

In 1906, as he was completing work on Dubliners, Joyce considered adding another story featuring a Jewish advertising canvasser called Leopold Bloom under the title Ulysses. The story was not written, but the idea stayed with Joyce and, in 1914, he started work on a novel using both the title and basic premise, completing it in October, 1921.

Thanks to Ezra Pound, serial publication of the novel in the magazine The Little Review began in 1918. This magazine was edited by Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap, with the backing of John Quinn, a New York attorney with an interest in contemporary experimental art and literature. Unfortunately, this serialisation ran into censorship problems in the United States, and in 1920 the editors were convicted of publishing obscenity, resulting in an end to the serial publication of the novel. The novel remained banned in the States until 1933.

At least partly because of this controversy, Joyce found it difficult to get a publisher to accept the book, but it was published in 1922 by Sylvia Beach from her well-known Left Bank bookshop, Shakespeare and Company. An English edition published the same year by Joyce's patron, Harriet Shaw Weaver, ran into further difficulties with the United States authorities, and 500 copies that were shipped to the States were seized and possibly destroyed. The following year, John Rodker produced a print run of 500 more intended to replace the missing copies, but these were burned by English customs at Folkestone. A further consequence of the novel's ambiguous legal status as a banned book was that a number of 'bootleg' versions appeared, most notably a number of pirate versions from the publisher Samuel Roth. In 1928, a court injunction against Roth was obtained and he ceased publication.

Ulysses and the rise of literary modernism

1922 was a key year in the history of English-language literary modernism, with the appearance of both Ulysses and T. S. Eliot's poem, The Waste Land. In Ulysses, Joyce employs stream of consciousness, parody, jokes, and virtually every other literary technique to present his characters. The action of the novel, which takes place in a single day, June 16, 1904, sets the characters and incidents of the Odyssey of Homer in modern Dublin and represents Odysseus (Ulysses), Penelope and Telemachus in the characters of Leopold Bloom, his wife Molly Bloom and Stephen Dedalus, parodically contrasted with their lofty models. The book explores various areas of Dublin life, dwelling on its squalor and monotony. Nevertheless, the book is also an affectionately detailed study of the city, and Joyce claimed that if Dublin were to be destroyed in some catastrophe it could be rebuilt, brick by brick, using his work as a model. In order to achieve this level of accuracy, Joyce used the 1904 edition of Thom's Directory— a work that listed the owners and/or tenants of every residential and commercial property in the city. He also bombarded friends still living there with requests for information and clarification.

The book consists of 18 chapters, each covering roughly one hour of the day, beginning around about 8 a.m. and ending sometime after 2 a.m. the following morning. Each of the 18 chapters of the novel employs its own literary style. Each chapter also refers to a specific episode in Homer's Odyssey and has a specific colour, art or science and bodily organ associated with it. This combination of kaleidoscopic writing with an extreme formal, schematic structure represents one of the book's major contributions to the development of 20th century modernist literature. The use of classical mythology as a framework for his book and the near-obsessive focus on external detail in a book in which much of the significant action is happening inside the minds of the characters are others. Nevertheless, Joyce complained that, "I may have oversystematised Ulysses," and played down the mythic correspondences by eliminating the chapter titles that had been taken from Homer.

Finnegans Wake

Writing Finnegans Wake

Having completed work on Ulysses, Joyce appears to have suffered from a period of writer's block. On March 10, 1923 he began work on a text that was to be known, first, as Work in Progress and later Finnegans Wake. By 1926 he had completed the first two parts of the book. In that year, he met Eugene and Maria Jolas who offered to serialise the book in their magazine transition. For the next few years, Joyce worked rapidly on the new book, but in the 1930s, progress slowed considerably. This was due to a number of factors, including the death of his father in 1931, concern over the mental health of his daughter Lucia and his own health problems, including failing eyesight. Much of the work was done with the assistance of younger admirers, including Samuel Beckett. For some years, Joyce nursed the eccentric plan of turning over the book to his friend James Stephens to complete, on the grounds that Stephens was born in the same hospital as Joyce exactly one week later, and shared the first name of both Joyce and of Joyce's fictional alter-ego (this is one example of Joyce's numerous superstitions).

Reaction to the early sections that appeared in transition was mixed, including negative comment from early supporters of Joyce's work, such as Pound and the author's brother Stanislaus Joyce. In order to counteract this hostile reception, a book of essays by supporters of the new work, including Beckett, William Carlos Williams and others was organised and published in 1929 under the title Our Exagmination Round His Factification for Incamination of Work in Progress. At his 47th birthday party at the Jolases' home, Joyce revealed the final title of the work and Finnegans Wake was published in book form on May 4, 1939.

Style and structure of Finnegans Wake

Joyce's method of stream of consciousness, literary allusions and free dream associations was pushed to the limit in Finnegans Wake, which abandoned all conventions of plot and character construction and is written in a peculiar and obscure language, based mainly on complex multi-level puns. This approach is similar to, but far more extensive than that used by Lewis Carroll in "Jabberwocky". If Ulysses is a day in the life of a city, the Wake is a night and partakes of the logic of dreams. This has led many readers and critics to apply Joyce's oft-quoted description in the Wake of Ulysses as a usylessly unreadable Blue Book to the Wake itself. However, readers have been able to reach a consensus about the central cast of characters and general plot.

Much of the wordplay in the book stems from the use of multilingual puns which draw on a wide range of languages. The role played by Beckett and other assistants included collating words from these languages on cards for Joyce to use and, as Joyce's eyesight worsened, of writing the text from the author's dictation.

The view of history propounded in this text is very strongly influenced by Giambattista Vico, and the metaphysics of Giordano Bruno of Nola are important to the interplay of the "characters". Vico propounded a cyclical view of history, in which civilisation rose from chaos, passed through theocratic, aristocratic, and democratic phases, and then lapsed back into chaos. The most obvious example of the influence of Vico's cyclical theory of history is to be found in the opening and closing sentences of the book. Finnegans Wake opens with the words 'riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shore to bend of bay, brings us by a commodius vicus of recirculation back to Howth Castle and Environs.' (with a pun on Vico in 'vicus') and ends 'A way a lone a last a loved a long the'. In other words, the first sentence starts on the last page and the last sentence on the first, turning the book into one great cycle. Indeed, Joyce said that the ideal reader of the Wake would suffer from ideal insomnia and, on completing the book, would turn to page one and start again, and so on in an endless cycle of reading.

On reading "Finnegans Wake"

For the many people who butted their heads against "Ulysses," the thought of tackling FW may seem to be a futile endeavor. But... There are some means to make the book come alive and for the words to begin to make sense. The first thing to overcome is that ability they expected in your schooling - reading comprehension - the idea being that you will understand what you are reading while you are reading. When reading FW you have to let this go and just read. You will comprehend over time, just don't get bogged down right from the start worrying about it. The next thing that helps is - read it out loud. As Joyce refers to the book's "soundsense" you have to hear the words to understand them. One of the best ways to experience the book is to find a group of people to read it together. For many years in various cities, there have been FW groups that would meet regularly to read it, out loud of course, and to discuss it. The book is so rich that the more points of view, the more richness revealed. A good pace is three to five pages a week. So few pages? You won't believe how much there is to find in just three to five pages.

There are many, many books that purport to explain just what FW is about. Some of these books are good, but try to avoid them when you first get started. They may color the experience and force you down other people's pathways. Just dive in and enjoy. Don't be afraid of marking up the book, underlining things, making notes, creating your own pathway in the text. One handy resource is "Annotations to Finnegans Wake" by Roland McHugh. Each page in this book is a map to each matching page in FW, giving clues, definitions, references, etc. to all that Joyce buried in his text. But don't sit flipping back and forth from one book to the other trying to understand each and every word. Just read, out loud, a good stretch of pages and then go back and see what might be there.

Yes, on first opening this book it may look like some other language, arcane and difficult, and possibly meaningless, at least to the usual reader, but if you just go with it, reading to hear the words, you may be surprised how much of the text will be meaningful, and how truly a great read FW is...

Legacy

A bust of James Joyce in St. Stephen's Green in Dublin

With the outbreak of the Second World War, Joyce was forced to leave Paris and eventually returned to Zurich, where he died at the age of 58. He is buried in the Fluntern Cemetery in that city, together with Nora, whom he had married in London in 1931.

Joyce's work has been subject to intense scrutiny by scholars of all types. He has also been an important influence on writers as diverse as Samuel Beckett, Jorge Luis Borges, Flann O'Brien, Máirtín Ó Cadhain, Salman Rushdie, Thomas Pynchon, William Burroughs, and many more.

Joyce's influence is also evident in fields other than literature. The phrase "Three Quarks for Muster Mark" in Joyce's Finnegans Wake is often called the source of the physicists' word "quark", the name of one of the main kinds of elementary particles, proposed by the physicist Murray Gell-Mann. (James Gleick's book Genius notes that Gell-Mann may have found the Joycean antecedent after the fact; as Gleick observes, physicists have pronounced quark to rhyme with cork and not with Mark.) The French philosopher Jacques Derrida has written a book on the use of language in Ulysses, and the American philosopher Donald Davidson has written similarly on Finnegans Wake in comparison with Lewis Carroll. Vladimir Nabokov esteemed Ulysses greatly, listing it with Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis" as one of the 20th century's greatest prose works. However, Nabokov was less than thrilled with Finnegans Wake (see Strong Opinions, The Annotated Lolita or Pale Fire), an attitude which Jorge Luis Borges shared.

Finnegans Wake is a recurring theme in Tom Robbins's novel Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates. In that novel, it is the favourite discussion topic of the Bangkok-based "C.R.A.F.T. Club" (Can't Remember A Fucking Thing). The protagonist, a CIA agent named Switters, contemplates writing a thesis about it.

The life of Joyce is celebrated annually on June 16, Bloomsday, in Dublin and in an increasing number of cities worldwide.

List of works

  • Chamber Music (1907 poems)
  • Dubliners (1914)
  • Exiles (1915 play)
  • A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916)
  • Ulysses (1922)
  • Pomes Penyeach (1927 poems)
  • Finnegans Wake (1939)

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The life of Joyce is celebrated annually on June 16, Bloomsday, in Dublin and in an increasing number of cities worldwide. After Everest (a second autobiography written by a ghost writer). The protagonist, a CIA agent named Switters, contemplates writing a thesis about it. Tenzing Norgay and James Ramsay Ullman, Man of Everest (first published as Tiger of the Snows). Club" (Can't Remember A Fucking Thing). He concluded: "If it is a shame to be the second man on Mount Everest, then I will have to live with this shame". Finnegans Wake is a recurring theme in Tom Robbins's novel Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates. In that novel, it is the favourite discussion topic of the Bangkok-based "C.R.A.F.T. Tenzing's account a few years later sounded very different: he stressed the unity of such teams and of their achievements, shrugged off the allegation of being ever pulled by anyone, but disclosed that Hillary was the first to put his foot on the summit.

However, Nabokov was less than thrilled with Finnegans Wake (see Strong Opinions, The Annotated Lolita or Pale Fire), an attitude which Jorge Luis Borges shared. In his book, Hillary described himself as the strong leader of the team, who not only was working hard making steps in the snow for both of them, but also had to pull Tenzing up those steps, and that Tenzing kept falling to the ground, extremely exhausted. Vladimir Nabokov esteemed Ulysses greatly, listing it with Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis" as one of the 20th century's greatest prose works. Hillary and Tenzing answered that question in characteristically different ways. (James Gleick's book Genius notes that Gell-Mann may have found the Joycean antecedent after the fact; as Gleick observes, physicists have pronounced quark to rhyme with cork and not with Mark.) The French philosopher Jacques Derrida has written a book on the use of language in Ulysses, and the American philosopher Donald Davidson has written similarly on Finnegans Wake in comparison with Lewis Carroll. For anyone familiar with extreme mountain climbing such question is a nonsense and a non-issue, since two people tied to two ends of one rope work as a team, a unity, and they constantly take turns in leading. The phrase "Three Quarks for Muster Mark" in Joyce's Finnegans Wake is often called the source of the physicists' word "quark", the name of one of the main kinds of elementary particles, proposed by the physicist Murray Gell-Mann. Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary were the first people to set their feet on the summit of Mount Everest, but journalists were persistently repeating the question which of the two men had the right to the glory of being the first one, and who was merely the second, the follower.

Joyce's influence is also evident in fields other than literature. Other relatives include his nephews, Gombu and Topgay, who also took part in the 1953 Everest expedition. He has also been an important influence on writers as diverse as Samuel Beckett, Jorge Luis Borges, Flann O'Brien, Máirtín Ó Cadhain, Salman Rushdie, Thomas Pynchon, William Burroughs, and many more. He took his third wife while his second wife was still alive, as allowed by Sherpa custom, and with her he had his son Jamling. Joyce's work has been subject to intense scrutiny by scholars of all types. His second wife was Ang Lahmu, a cousin of his first wife, they had no children but she acted as stepmother to his daughters. He is buried in the Fluntern Cemetery in that city, together with Nora, whom he had married in London in 1931. With her he had a son, Nima Dorje, who died at the age of 4, and two daughters, Nima and Pem Pem.

With the outbreak of the Second World War, Joyce was forced to leave Paris and eventually returned to Zurich, where he died at the age of 58. His first wife, Dawa Phuti, died young in 1944. Yes, on first opening this book it may look like some other language, arcane and difficult, and possibly meaningless, at least to the usual reader, but if you just go with it, reading to hear the words, you may be surprised how much of the text will be meaningful, and how truly a great read FW is... Tenzing was married three times. Just read, out loud, a good stretch of pages and then go back and see what might be there. As of 2003, the company is run by his son Jamling Tenzing Norgay, who himself reached the summit of Everest in 1996. But don't sit flipping back and forth from one book to the other trying to understand each and every word. In 1978, he founded a company, Tenzing Norgay Adventures, that offers trekking in the Himalaya.

to all that Joyce buried in his text. Tenzing later became director of field training for the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute in Darjeeling. Each page in this book is a map to each matching page in FW, giving clues, definitions, references, etc. After he climbed Everest, he was met with adulation in India and Nepal, and even literally worshipped by some people who believed he must be an incarnation of Buddha or Siva. One handy resource is "Annotations to Finnegans Wake" by Roland McHugh. In 1952, he took part in two Swiss expeditions led by Raymond Lambert, the first serious attempts to climb Everest from the southern Nepalese side, during which he and Lambert reached the then record height of 8,599 m (28,215 ft). Don't be afraid of marking up the book, underlining things, making notes, creating your own pathway in the text. He also took part in other climbs in various parts of the Indian sub-continent, and lived for a while in what is now Pakistan; he said that the most difficult climb he ever took part in was on Nanda Devi East, where a number of people were killed.

Just dive in and enjoy. In 1947 he took part in an attempt which entered Tibet illegally, consisting only of an eccentric Englishman Earl Denman, himself, and another Sherpa Ang Dawa. They may color the experience and force you down other people's pathways. He took part as a high-altitude porter in three official British attempts to climb Everest from the northern Tibetan side in the 1930s. Some of these books are good, but try to avoid them when you first get started. He ran away to Kathmandu twice as a boy, and eventually settled in the Sherpa community in Too Song Bhusti in Darjeeling in India. There are many, many books that purport to explain just what FW is about. His exact date of birth is uncertain, but he knew it was late May from the weather and the crops, and in later years he decided to treat May 29 as his birthday as this was the date he climbed Everest.

So few pages? You won't believe how much there is to find in just three to five pages. His father was Ghang La Mingma (who died in 1949) and his mother was Kinzom (who lived to see him climb Everest); he was the 11th of 13 children, most of who died young. A good pace is three to five pages a week. At the time he climbed Everest it was generally believed that he was born there, but in the 1990s it was claimed that he was actually born in Tibet, but this was hushed up for political reasons. The book is so rich that the more points of view, the more richness revealed. Tenzing grew up in a peasant family in Solo Khumbu in Nepal, very near Mount Everest, which his people knew as Chomolungma. For many years in various cities, there have been FW groups that would meet regularly to read it, out loud of course, and to discuss it. Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay were the first men to reach the summit.

One of the best ways to experience the book is to find a group of people to read it together. Tenzing Norgay (May 29(?) 1914 – May 9, 1986) was a Nepalese sherpa, a participant in seven expeditions to Mount Everest culminating in the first successful ascent, during Sir John Hunt's expedition of 1953. As Joyce refers to the book's "soundsense" you have to hear the words to understand them. The next thing that helps is - read it out loud. You will comprehend over time, just don't get bogged down right from the start worrying about it.

When reading FW you have to let this go and just read. The first thing to overcome is that ability they expected in your schooling - reading comprehension - the idea being that you will understand what you are reading while you are reading. There are some means to make the book come alive and for the words to begin to make sense. But..

For the many people who butted their heads against "Ulysses," the thought of tackling FW may seem to be a futile endeavor. Indeed, Joyce said that the ideal reader of the Wake would suffer from ideal insomnia and, on completing the book, would turn to page one and start again, and so on in an endless cycle of reading. In other words, the first sentence starts on the last page and the last sentence on the first, turning the book into one great cycle. Finnegans Wake opens with the words 'riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shore to bend of bay, brings us by a commodius vicus of recirculation back to Howth Castle and Environs.' (with a pun on Vico in 'vicus') and ends 'A way a lone a last a loved a long the'.

The most obvious example of the influence of Vico's cyclical theory of history is to be found in the opening and closing sentences of the book. Vico propounded a cyclical view of history, in which civilisation rose from chaos, passed through theocratic, aristocratic, and democratic phases, and then lapsed back into chaos. The view of history propounded in this text is very strongly influenced by Giambattista Vico, and the metaphysics of Giordano Bruno of Nola are important to the interplay of the "characters". The role played by Beckett and other assistants included collating words from these languages on cards for Joyce to use and, as Joyce's eyesight worsened, of writing the text from the author's dictation.

Much of the wordplay in the book stems from the use of multilingual puns which draw on a wide range of languages. However, readers have been able to reach a consensus about the central cast of characters and general plot. This has led many readers and critics to apply Joyce's oft-quoted description in the Wake of Ulysses as a usylessly unreadable Blue Book to the Wake itself. If Ulysses is a day in the life of a city, the Wake is a night and partakes of the logic of dreams.

This approach is similar to, but far more extensive than that used by Lewis Carroll in "Jabberwocky". Joyce's method of stream of consciousness, literary allusions and free dream associations was pushed to the limit in Finnegans Wake, which abandoned all conventions of plot and character construction and is written in a peculiar and obscure language, based mainly on complex multi-level puns. At his 47th birthday party at the Jolases' home, Joyce revealed the final title of the work and Finnegans Wake was published in book form on May 4, 1939. In order to counteract this hostile reception, a book of essays by supporters of the new work, including Beckett, William Carlos Williams and others was organised and published in 1929 under the title Our Exagmination Round His Factification for Incamination of Work in Progress.

Reaction to the early sections that appeared in transition was mixed, including negative comment from early supporters of Joyce's work, such as Pound and the author's brother Stanislaus Joyce. For some years, Joyce nursed the eccentric plan of turning over the book to his friend James Stephens to complete, on the grounds that Stephens was born in the same hospital as Joyce exactly one week later, and shared the first name of both Joyce and of Joyce's fictional alter-ego (this is one example of Joyce's numerous superstitions). Much of the work was done with the assistance of younger admirers, including Samuel Beckett. This was due to a number of factors, including the death of his father in 1931, concern over the mental health of his daughter Lucia and his own health problems, including failing eyesight.

For the next few years, Joyce worked rapidly on the new book, but in the 1930s, progress slowed considerably. In that year, he met Eugene and Maria Jolas who offered to serialise the book in their magazine transition. By 1926 he had completed the first two parts of the book. On March 10, 1923 he began work on a text that was to be known, first, as Work in Progress and later Finnegans Wake.

Having completed work on Ulysses, Joyce appears to have suffered from a period of writer's block. Nevertheless, Joyce complained that, "I may have oversystematised Ulysses," and played down the mythic correspondences by eliminating the chapter titles that had been taken from Homer. The use of classical mythology as a framework for his book and the near-obsessive focus on external detail in a book in which much of the significant action is happening inside the minds of the characters are others. This combination of kaleidoscopic writing with an extreme formal, schematic structure represents one of the book's major contributions to the development of 20th century modernist literature.

Each chapter also refers to a specific episode in Homer's Odyssey and has a specific colour, art or science and bodily organ associated with it. Each of the 18 chapters of the novel employs its own literary style. the following morning. and ending sometime after 2 a.m.

The book consists of 18 chapters, each covering roughly one hour of the day, beginning around about 8 a.m. He also bombarded friends still living there with requests for information and clarification. In order to achieve this level of accuracy, Joyce used the 1904 edition of Thom's Directory— a work that listed the owners and/or tenants of every residential and commercial property in the city. Nevertheless, the book is also an affectionately detailed study of the city, and Joyce claimed that if Dublin were to be destroyed in some catastrophe it could be rebuilt, brick by brick, using his work as a model.

The book explores various areas of Dublin life, dwelling on its squalor and monotony. The action of the novel, which takes place in a single day, June 16, 1904, sets the characters and incidents of the Odyssey of Homer in modern Dublin and represents Odysseus (Ulysses), Penelope and Telemachus in the characters of Leopold Bloom, his wife Molly Bloom and Stephen Dedalus, parodically contrasted with their lofty models. In Ulysses, Joyce employs stream of consciousness, parody, jokes, and virtually every other literary technique to present his characters. Eliot's poem, The Waste Land.

S. 1922 was a key year in the history of English-language literary modernism, with the appearance of both Ulysses and T. In 1928, a court injunction against Roth was obtained and he ceased publication. A further consequence of the novel's ambiguous legal status as a banned book was that a number of 'bootleg' versions appeared, most notably a number of pirate versions from the publisher Samuel Roth.

The following year, John Rodker produced a print run of 500 more intended to replace the missing copies, but these were burned by English customs at Folkestone. An English edition published the same year by Joyce's patron, Harriet Shaw Weaver, ran into further difficulties with the United States authorities, and 500 copies that were shipped to the States were seized and possibly destroyed. At least partly because of this controversy, Joyce found it difficult to get a publisher to accept the book, but it was published in 1922 by Sylvia Beach from her well-known Left Bank bookshop, Shakespeare and Company. The novel remained banned in the States until 1933.

Unfortunately, this serialisation ran into censorship problems in the United States, and in 1920 the editors were convicted of publishing obscenity, resulting in an end to the serial publication of the novel. This magazine was edited by Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap, with the backing of John Quinn, a New York attorney with an interest in contemporary experimental art and literature. Thanks to Ezra Pound, serial publication of the novel in the magazine The Little Review began in 1918. The story was not written, but the idea stayed with Joyce and, in 1914, he started work on a novel using both the title and basic premise, completing it in October, 1921.

In 1906, as he was completing work on Dubliners, Joyce considered adding another story featuring a Jewish advertising canvasser called Leopold Bloom under the title Ulysses. It was published in Collected Poems (1936). The other poetry Joyce published in his lifetime consists of Gas From A Burner (1912), Pomes Penyeach (1927) and Ecce Puer, written in 1932 to mark the near death of his father and birth of his grandson. This publication led to his inclusion in the Imagist Anthology, edited by Ezra Pound, who was a champion for Joyce.

His first full-length poetry collection Chamber Music (named after the sound of urine hitting the side of a chamber pot) consisted of 36 short lyrics. His first mature published work was the satirical broadside The Holy Office (1904), in which he proclaimed himself to be the superior of many prominent members of the Celtic revival. Joyce also published a number of books of poetry. A study of a husband and wife relationship, the play looks back to The Dead (the final story in Dubliners) and forward to Ulysses, which was begun around the time of the play's composition.

Despite early interest in the theatre, Joyce published only one play, Exiles, begun shortly after the outbreak of World War I in 1914 and published in 1918. In this novel, some glimpses of Joyce's later techniques are evident, in the use of interior monologue and in the concern with the psychic rather than external reality. The main character is Stephen Dedalus, Joyce's representation of himself. It is largely autobiographical, showing the process of attaining maturity and self-consciousness by a gifted young man.

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is a nearly complete rewrite of the abandoned Stephen Hero novel. The stories incorporate epiphanies, a word used particularly by Joyce, by which he meant a sudden consciousness of the "soul" of a thing. The early volume of short stories, Dubliners, is a penetrating analysis of the stagnation and paralysis of Dublin society. Joyce's Irish experiences are essential to his writings, and provide all of the settings for his fiction and much of their subject matter.

In their now legendary literary magazine "transition," the Jolases published serially various sections of Joyce's novel under the title Work in Progress.. Were it not for their unwavering support, there is a good possibility the book might never have been finished or published. In Paris, Maria and Eugene Jolas nursed Joyce during his long years of writing Finnegans Wake. He returned to Zurich only shortly before his death.

In 1915 he moved to Zurich, and returned to Paris in 1920 where, apart from two visits to Ireland, he remained for the next twenty years. Joyce would spend most of the rest of his life on the Continent. One of his students in Trieste was Ettore Schmitz; they met in 1907 and became lasting friends and mutual critics. The pair went into self-imposed exile, moving first to Pola and then Trieste in Austria-Hungary to teach English.

Shortly thereafter he eloped with Nora. After staying in Gogarty's Martello Tower for six nights he left following an altercation, got drunk in a brothel and got into a fight, from which he was rescued by his father's acquaintance, Alfred Hunter, an Irish Jew who provided the model for Leopold Bloom, who is one of the protagonists of Ulysses. He took up with medical student Oliver St John Gogarty, who formed the basis for the character Buck Mulligan in Ulysses. Joyce remained in Dublin for some time longer, drinking heavily.

On June 16, 1904, they went on their first date, an event which would be commemorated by providing the date for the action of Ulysses. The same year he met Nora Barnacle, a young woman from Connemara, County Galway who was working as a chambermaid. He decided, on his twenty-second birthday, to revise the story and turn it into a novel he planned to call Stephen Hero. In January of the next year he wrote A Portrait of the Artist, an essay-story dealing with aesthetics, in a day, only to have it rejected from the free-thinking magazine Dana.

He scraped a living reviewing books, teaching and singing. After she died he began to drink heavily, and conditions at home grew quite appalling. He returned to Ireland after a few months, when his mother was diagnosed with cancer. After graduating from UCD, Joyce left for Paris; supposedly to study medicine, but instead to squander money his family could not afford.

Many of the friends he made at University College would appear as characters in Joyce's written works. Joyce wrote a number of other articles and at least two plays (since lost) during this period. His review of Ibsen's New Drama was published in 1900 and resulted in a letter of thanks from the Norwegian dramatist himself. He also became active in theatrical and literary circles in the city.

He studied modern languages, specifically English, French and Italian. He enrolled at University College Dublin in 1898. Thomas Aquinas would remain a strong influence on him throughout his life. Joyce, however, would reject Catholicism by the age of 16, although the philosophy of St.

The offer was made at least partly in the hope that he would prove to have a vocation and join the Jesuits himself. Joyce then studied at home and briefly at the Christian Brothers school on North Richmond Street before he was offered a place in the Jesuits' Dublin school, Belvedere College, in 1893. James Joyce was initially educated at Clongowes Wood College, a boarding school in County Kildare, which he entered in 1888 but had to leave in 1892 when his father could no longer pay the fees. John Joyce was the model for the character of Simon Daedalus in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Ulysses, as well as several characters in Dubliners..

This was the beginning of a slide into poverty for the family, mainly due to John's drinking and general financial mismanagement. In 1893 John Joyce was dismissed with a pension. In November of that same year, John Joyce was entered in Stubbs Gazette (an official register of bankruptcies) and suspended from work. His father had it printed and even sent a copy to the Vatican Library.

In 1891, James wrote a poem, Et Tu Healy, on the death of Charles Stewart Parnell. Although many of Joyce's works illustrate the rich tradition of the Catholic Church, his short story "Araby" displays his discontedness and loss of faith with the Church. In 1887, his father, John Stanislaus Joyce, was appointed rate collector by Dublin Corporation; the family subsequently moved to the fashionable new suburb of Bray. His father's family, originally from Cork, were wealthy merchants.

He was the eldest surviving child; two of his siblings died of typhoid. James Joyce was born into a well-off Catholic family in the Dublin suburb of Rathgar. . In this, he became both one of the most cosmopolitan and one of the most local of all the great English language modernists.

His fictional universe is firmly rooted in Dublin and reflects his family life and the events and friends (and enemies) from his school and college days. Although most of his adult life was spent outside the country, Joyce's Irish experiences are essential to his writings and provide all of the settings for his fiction and much of their subject matter. He is best known for his short story collection Dubliners (1914), and his novels A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), Ulysses (1922) and Finnegans Wake (1939). James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (February 2, 1882 – January 13, 1941) was an expatriate Irish writer and poet, widely considered a significant writer of the 20th century.

Finnegans Wake (1939). Pomes Penyeach (1927 poems). Ulysses (1922). A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916).

Exiles (1915 play). Dubliners (1914). Chamber Music (1907 poems).