<b>James</b> <b>Joyce< - BookwormSearch
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Topic: <b>James</b> <b>Joyce<



  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> 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.
Quillian, William H. Hamlet and the new poetic: <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce and T.S. Eliot.
Around this time Joyce was attacked by a dog, an event which caused a lifelong fear of dogs, in addition to his fear of thunderstorms, which his deeply religious aunt had described as a sign of God's wrath.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Joyce   (4544 words)

  
 Alibris: <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce's last work (1939), and by far most difficult (if not impenetrable) novel, is a long, gorgeous flow of words that has been described by some critics as the dreaming life of a man named Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker.
Joyce's celebrated short-story sequence provides a vivid and disturbing picture of early 20th-century Dublin and its inhabitants, whom Joyce saw as trapped in a repressed and stultifying environment.
Joyce spent 17 years of his life writing this monumental novel, in which he attempted to portray the dreams, nightmares, and fantasies experienced by a sleeping man, the Dublin publican Humphrey C. Earwicker, and his family--dreams that encompass the entire history of the world.
http://www.alibris.com/search/books/author/Joyce,James   (1035 words)

  
 GradeSaver: ClassicNote: Biography of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce
As <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce made contact with various members of the "Irish Literary Renaissance," his interest in the priesthood waned.
On January 13, 1941, <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce died of a stomach ulcer at the age of 58, and was buried in Zurich's Fluntern Cemetery.
Thematically similar to Joyce's previous works, Ulysses examines the relationship between the modern man and his myth and history, focusing on contemporary questions of Irish political and cultural independence, the effects of organized religion on the soul, and the cultural and moral decay produced economic development and heightened urbanization.
http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/authors/about_james_joyce.html   (949 words)

  
 Joyce, <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>>. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
Ulysses, written between 1914 and 1921, was published in parts in The Little Review and The Egoist, but Joyce encountered the same opposition to publishing the novel in book form that he had confronted with Dubliners.
Joyce returned to Ireland briefly in 1909 in a futile attempt to start a chain of motion picture theaters in Dublin, and again in 1912 in an unsuccessful attempt to arrange for the publication of the short story collection Dubliners, which had to be abandoned due to fears of prosecution for obscenity and libel.
Joyce and Nora had a turbulent relationship; both were profoundly affected by the progressive insanity of their daughter.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/jo/Joyce-Ja.html   (1092 words)

  
 Joyce - Biographical Sketches
Biography of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce – Tim Miller of Six Galley Press has kindly donated this comprehensive biographical essay on <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce.
It eventually appeared in book form in 1922 in Paris, where Joyce and his family had settled, in a limited edition of 1,000 copies, and was followed by an English edition of 2,000 copies, also printed in Paris.
Joyce’s domestic life was a happy one – although indeed checkered by a morbid jealousy correlative with his sense of persecution as a writer and in its last years darkened by his daughter’s decline into insanity.
http://www.themodernword.com/joyce/joyce_biography.html   (1718 words)

  
 JOYCE AND HIS TIME
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Augustine Aloysius Joyce was born on February 2, 1882, in Rathgar, a fairly prosperous southern suburb of Dublin.
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce was the eldest surviving child; two of his siblings died of typhoid, a disease encouraged by the family's poverty.
The earliest Joyces were Norman, but later established themselves in the West of Ireland near Galway, where a large area is known as "the Joyce Country." John Joyce insisted upon the family's noble descent, and indeed a Joyce coat of arms is registered, with the motto, "Mors aut honorabilis vita" ("An honorable life or death").
http://web.nwe.ufl.edu/~kershner/bioa.html   (1229 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce - Biography and Works
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce was born in Dublin, on February 2, 1882, as the son of John Stanislaus Joyce, an impoverished gentleman, who had failed in a distillery business and tried all kinds of professions, including politics and tax collecting.
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce (1882-1941), Irish novelist, noted for his experimental use of language in such works as Ulysses (1922) and Finneganns Wake (1939).
“The first half of the 20th century can be characterised as ‘science split the atom and Joyce split the word’ and this is particularly applicable to Finnegans Wake, where every word and phrase is loaded with meaning.
http://www.online-literature.com/james_joyce   (1110 words)

  
 http://www.artsworld.ie/joyce_school/index.html
Each year scholars and lovers of Joyce gather from all corners of the globe to celebrate and analyse the work of this great writer.
This unique setting provides the perfect backdrop against which to reflect on Joyce's works and to assess his continuing influence on contemporary fiction in Ireland and elsewhere.
The aim of the Summer School is look at Joyce in an open and pluralist fashion and to consider all of the numerous contexts of his work which are of interest both to the scholar and to the general reader.
http://www.artsworld.ie/joyce_school   (465 words)

  
 Amazon.com: <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce (Oxford Lives S.): Books: Richard Ellmann
Twenty two years ago I was enrolled in Richard Ellman's class on <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce at Emory University and when I was introduced to him by the head of the English Department I was informed that Ellman was the best informed authority on Joyce since 1941 when that person was of course Joyce himself.
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce most likely can be considered a "starving artist." He would go without a new pair of shoes until they wore down to the soles, but looked debonair and sophisticated with non-matching suits.
Joyce appeared to be an eccentric and stubborn man. However, Ellmann shows a caring and supporting man who loved his wife and children, and most of all, his father, John Stanislaus Joyce.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0195033817?v=glance   (2125 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Novelist
In "The Aesthetics of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce," Jacques Aubert assesses the role Joyce assigned himself in relation to his literary and philosophical contemporaries and predecessors.
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce was born on February 2, 1882 in Dublin, Ireland.
Published in 1916 to immediate acclaim, "Portrait" is semi-autobiographical tale of Joyce's alterego, Stephen Dedalus, who later reappeared as one of the main characters in his "Ulysses." It is the story of his passage from university student to "independent" artist.
http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/96feb/joyce.html   (1187 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce - Wikiquote
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce (<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Augustine Aloysius Joyce, 2 February 1882 - 13 January 1941), Irish novelist, short-story writer and poet.
Stephen Hero was an early version of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, abandoned by Joyce in 1905, published posthumously in 1944.
A way a lone a last a loved a long the 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.
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/James_Joyce   (1436 words)

  
 TIME 100: <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce once told a friend, "One of the things I could never get accustomed to in my youth was the difference I found between life and literature." All serious young readers notice this difference.
Born near Dublin in 1882, <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Augustine Aloysius was the eldest of the 10 surviving children of John and Mary Jane Joyce.
He fled Ireland into self-imposed exile late in 1904, taking with him Nora Barnacle, a young woman from Galway who was working as a hotel chambermaid in Dublin when Joyce met her earlier that year.
http://www.time.com/time/time100/artists/profile/joyce.html   (355 words)

  
 Joyce Resources
The International <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Foundation -- The IJJF home page is the internet source for information about the International <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Foundation and about Joyce studies across the net.
Music in the Works of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce -- A companion web site to the fine compact disc of the same title, featuring songs important to Joyce's writing.
Zürich <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Foundation -- The home of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce in Switzerland.
http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/rickard/Joyce.html   (357 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Parlour
Publications: The <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Parlour Japan mainly publishes the Abiko Quarterly.
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Parlour Pub: One of the rooms in the <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Parlour is set aside for people to play or to have a drink.
The Abiko Quarterly is a publication of the <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Parlour Japan.
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Nook/6966   (1926 words)

  
 fUSION Anomaly. <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce
Letter, 10 Oct. 1921, to Joyce's publisher (published in Letters of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce, vol.
In particular, Grof's term 'coex systems' should be understood by everybody who writes about Joyce or tries to read him.
intention of leaving Ireland for good; from a private collection (an inaccurate text, taken from a typescript of this letter, is printed in Letters of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce, vol.
http://fusionanomaly.net/jamesjoyce.html   (1438 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce: The Brazen Head - Author Homepage
Here you can hear what oldtimers had to say about the works of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce, and catch up on what today’s regulars are saying about the many books about Joyce.
It is my intention to create a comfortable spot where long time enthusiasts of Joyce and those just beginning to read his work may visit and kick back to enjoy exploring the world of this delightfully mad Irishman.
Here you will find many discussions about Joyce and his work, from guides and annotations to in-depth analysis and criticism.
http://www.themodernword.com/joyce   (1019 words)

  
 Salon.com Audio <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Augustine Aloysius Joyce was born on February 2, 1882.
With a wonderfully dizzying array of multilingual puns and arcane allusions, Joyce proclaimed it was "a history of the world." Because of the innovative and unusual fragmentary nature of the novel, many of Joyce's supporters abandoned him with the belief that he was wasting his talents.
Between the years of 1904 and 1907, Joyce wrote "Dubliners," his famous series of short stories.
http://www.salon.com/audio/2000/10/05/joyce1   (359 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce at LiteratureClassics.com -- essays, resources
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce was born in Dublin, and educated by Jesuits and at the Catholic University College, Dublin.
During his career Joyce suffered from rejections from publishers, suppression by censors, and attacks by critics, and misunderstanding by readers.
If you're knowledgeable about Joyce consider helping us build this site by becoming a Classics Expert.
http://www.literatureclassics.com/authors/Joyce   (576 words)

  
 Joycean: <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce » Home
We were previously "In Bloom: <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce" and decided to try that "our name is our address" thing.
The <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Discussion Forums are finished and ready to go, so feel free to post.
In celebration of Joyce's 120th birthday (he doesn't look a day over 110) we decided to open a website.
http://www.joycean.org   (340 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce
Jaffares, A. Norman, and Kennelly, Brandan, ed., Joycechoyce: The Poems in Verse and Prose of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce (Schull, West Cork: Roberts Rinehart, 1992)
Burgess, Anthony, Joysprick: An Introduction to the Language of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce (1975)
Benstock, Bernard, ed., The Seventh of Joyce (1982)
http://www.lit.kobe-u.ac.jp/~hishika/joyce.htm   (507 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Music in Ulysses Dubliners A Portrait Finnegans Wake
If he had not become a writer, there is a very good chance that <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce would still have made a name for himself by pursuing a career as a vocal performer.
What has long been rare in Joycean scholarship, however, is the opportunity to hear these songs performed in an historically accurate style that would be familiar to Joyce, and as his contemporaries would have heard them.
~ Music from the Works of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce ~
http://www.james-joyce-music.com   (487 words)

  
 The JoyceColl Collection
The selected works compiled in the <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Scholars' Collection (JJSC) all share two characteristics: 1) all the books are currently out-of-print and 2) they are valuable, perhaps indispensable, to those who seek a more complete understanding and appreciation of the richness of <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce's literary works.
<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce and the Making of 'Ulysses', and Other Writings
A Gaelic Lexicon for Finnegans Wake, and Glossary for Joyce's Other Works
http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/JoyceColl   (211 words)

  
 IQ Infinity: the unknown <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce
The movie portrays Joyce swearing, which he never did in later life, but Joseph Holloway (in his diaries), CP Curran (in the NY Times) and Padraic Colum (in a memoir) acknowledge that the Joyce of 1904 swore freely.
Because Joyce is so obscure, it's easy for anyone who's intellectually ambitious to become the local Joyce expert by reading Ellmann and a few other sources.
These patterns were hinted by Joyce in privately-circulated schemata.
http://www.robotwisdom.com/jaj   (3273 words)

  
 The San Antonio College LitWeb <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Page
Derek Attridge, The Cambridge Companion to <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce.
One is off to a good start on a Joyce collection when one has acquired The Portable <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce.
Ellmann was the premier Joyce scholar, and his picture adorns the walls of bookstores from Dublin to Galway.
http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/joyce.htm   (176 words)

  
 Flying By the Net 1: Introduction
Flying By the Net, designed to be a regular <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Quarterly column, hopes to track the enormous amount of Internet activity that Joyce and his works have inspired.
The printed <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Quarterly version gives the URL in a third line, but that line is omitted here.
Additions and corrections that are not in the printed <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Quarterly version are in red.
http://publish.uwo.ca/~mgroden/flying1.html   (673 words)

  
 University of Texas Press: Joyce Studies Annual
of Giordano Bruno: The Significance of the Brunonian Presence in <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce’s
A Proverbial Tale of Tree or Stone: Joyce's Rewriting of Plato's Reminders
The National Library of Ireland's New Joyce Manuscripts: An Outline and Archive Comparisons
http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/journals/jjsa.html   (277 words)

  
 Ulysses for Dummies
DISCLAIMER: This site is a parody of both <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce's novel Ulysses and the IDG Books series of publications which are protected by trademark.
This is a shame, because Joyce was writing for a general readership, and his novel offers a remarkable experience even for the reader with no prior familiarity with Joyce's world.
ames Joyce's Ulysses has been hailed as a masterpiece since its publication in 1922.
http://www.bway.net/~hunger/ulysses.html   (326 words)

  
 The Finnegans Wake Society of New York -- Joyce reading from the Wake
The text had been prepared for Joyce in half-inch-high letters, but the lighting in the studio was so poor that he still could not read it easily.
Ogden persuaded Joyce to come to the Institute to record the last pages of the Anna Livia chapter.
The recording was done nevertheless, with Joyce prompted in a whisper throughout.
http://www.finneganswake.org/joycereading.htm   (532 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce
This is a guide to those passages in the Odyssey that provide the most overt bases for episodes in Joyce's Ulysses.
This chart summarizes the links between episodes in Ulysses and books in the Odyssey, in order to expose the achronological and intermittent nature of Joyce's borrowings from/parallels to the Odyssey.
Bear in mind that Ulysses has eighteen episodes and the Odyssey has twenty-four books.
http://www.levity.com/corduroy/joycehom.htm   (409 words)

  
 The <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Society: Home Page
The <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Society presents John McCourt of the Trieste Joyce School on "<<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce and Irish Catholicism" on Tuesday, April 25 at 6:30 pm at the Gotham Book Mart, 16 East 46th Street, New York City
Membership: Print out the application form to join or renew The <<b>bb>>Jamesb>bb>> Joyce Society for 2006....
Links: Follow links to the Finnegans Wake Society of New York and selected Joyce web pages for text, criticism, media, and discussion....
http://joycesociety.org   (234 words)

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