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| | James Joyce - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Quillian, William H. Hamlet and the new poetic: James 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. |  | | Joyce refused to pray at her bedside but this seems to have had more to do with Joyce's agnosticism than antagonism for his mother. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Joyce
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| | Alibris: James Joyce |
 | | James 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. |
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http://www.alibris.com/search/books/author/Joyce,James
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| | GradeSaver: ClassicNote: Biography of James Joyce |
 | | 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. |  | | As a result of their steadily diminishing wealth and income, the Joyce family was repeatedly forced to move to more modest residences and John Joyce's habitual unemployment as well as his drinking and spending habits, made it difficult for the Joyces to retain their previous social standing. |  | | As James Joyce made contact with various members of the "Irish Literary Renaissance," his interest in the priesthood waned. |
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http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/authors/about_james_joyce.html
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| | Joyce, James. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05 |
 | | Perhaps the most influential and significant novelist of the 20th cent., Joyce was a master of the English language, exploiting all of its resources. |  | | 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. |  | | A new edition of Ulysses, edited by H. Gabler, appeared in 1986, claiming to correct more than 5,000 errors that had been discovered in previous editions; it was itself flawed, and the publisher has subsequently reissued the 1961 edition in tandem with Gablers. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/65/jo/Joyce-Ja.html
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| | Joyce - Biographical Sketches |
 | | 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. |  | | He is taken, in fact, as the quintessential exiled writer of the twentieth century, who obsessively relates to his past by distancing himself from it. |  | | Biography of James Joyce Tim Miller of Six Galley Press has kindly donated this comprehensive biographical essay on James Joyce. |
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http://www.themodernword.com/joyce/joyce_biography.html
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| | JOYCE AND HIS TIME |
 | | 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"). |  | | Like Joyce, Stephen Dedalus views himself as their potential successor, an Artist-Hero who may save his country not only from its enemies but from itself. |  | | Despite the repressive picture he paints of the school in Portrait, Joyce later spoke warmly of his experience there; unlike Stephen, whom we only see unjustly punished, Joyce received punishment that he admitted he deserved on several occasions, including once for bad language. |
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http://web.nwe.ufl.edu/~kershner/bioa.html
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| | James Joyce - Biography and Works |
 | | James 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. |  | | James 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. |
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http://www.online-literature.com/james_joyce
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| | http://www.artsworld.ie/joyce_school/index.html |
 | | In addition, a primary purpose of the school is to relate Joyce to Irish culture today and to consider the challenges which he poses for artists in contemporary Ireland. |  | | 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. |
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http://www.artsworld.ie/joyce_school
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| | James Joyce Novelist |
 | | In "The Aesthetics of James Joyce," Jacques Aubert assesses the role Joyce assigned himself in relation to his literary and philosophical contemporaries and predecessors. |  | | 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. |  | | In Joyce's Grand Operoar, two internationally respected Joyce scholars join forces to present over 3,000 of Joyce's opera allusions as they appear in Finnegans Wake. |
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http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/96feb/joyce.html
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| | Amazon.com: James Joyce (Oxford Lives S.): Books: Richard Ellmann |
 | | 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. |  | | In it Joyce not only recounts the particulars of his life (he also edited collections of Joyce's letters so he was more than familiar with the twists and turns of that extraordinarily disorderly life). |  | | Twenty two years ago I was enrolled in Richard Ellman's class on James 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. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0195033817?v=glance
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| | James Joyce - Wikiquote |
 | | James Joyce (James 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. |  | | He comes into the world God knows how, walks on the water, gets out of his grave and goes up off the Hill of Howth. |
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http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/James_Joyce
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| | TIME 100: James Joyce |
 | | James 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. |  | | 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. |  | | The life he would put into his literature was chiefly his own. |
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http://www.time.com/time/time100/artists/profile/joyce.html
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| | Joyce Resources |
 | | The International James Joyce Foundation -- The IJJF home page is the internet source for information about the International James Joyce Foundation and about Joyce studies across the net. |  | | Music in the Works of James Joyce -- A companion web site to the fine compact disc of the same title, featuring songs important to Joyce's writing. |  | | Zürich James Joyce Foundation -- The home of James Joyce in Switzerland. |
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http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/rickard/Joyce.html
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| | James Joyce Parlour |
 | | Wanted: All books and documents Joyce is known to have used. |  | | Publications: The James Joyce Parlour Japan mainly publishes the Abiko Quarterly. |  | | We have "A Bouquet of Blooms:" ten woodcuts on the Nighttown section of Joyce's Ulysses by Julien Alberts. |
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http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Nook/6966
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| | James Joyce at LiteratureClassics.com -- essays, resources |
 | | During his career Joyce suffered from rejections from publishers, suppression by censors, and attacks by critics, and misunderstanding by readers. |  | | From 1902 Joyce led a nomadic life, which perhaps reflected in h... |  | | If you're knowledgeable about Joyce consider helping us build this site by becoming a Classics Expert. |
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http://www.literatureclassics.com/authors/Joyce
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| | Salon.com Audio James Joyce |
 | | 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. |  | | In 1923 Joyce began "Finnegans Wake," perhaps the most baffling of his works. |
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http://www.salon.com/audio/2000/10/05/joyce1
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| | James Joyce: The Brazen Head - Author Homepage |
 | | 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 can hear what oldtimers had to say about the works of James Joyce, and catch up on what todays regulars are saying about the many books about Joyce. |  | | Here you will find many discussions about Joyce and his work, from guides and annotations to in-depth analysis and criticism. |
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http://www.themodernword.com/joyce
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| | fUSION Anomaly. James Joyce |
 | | Letter, 10 Oct. 1921, to Joyce's publisher (published in Letters of James 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 James Joyce, vol. |
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http://fusionanomaly.net/jamesjoyce.html
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| | Joycean: James Joyce » Home |
 | | Forget that capricious groundhog and read some of Joyce's works. |  | | We were previously "In Bloom: James Joyce" and decided to try that "our name is our address" thing. |  | | We've also just finished editing Joyce's only play, Exiles, and while it's not one of his more famous works, we hope you'll enjoy its rare inclusion. |
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http://www.joycean.org
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| | James Joyce |
 | | The official programme of the 1999 edition of the 'Trieste Joyce School'. |  | | Jaffares, A. Norman, and Kennelly, Brandan, ed., Joycechoyce: The Poems in Verse and Prose of James Joyce (Schull, West Cork: Roberts Rinehart, 1992) |  | | Benstock, Bernard, ed., The Seventh of Joyce (1982) |
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http://www.lit.kobe-u.ac.jp/~hishika/joyce.htm
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| | James Joyce Music in Ulysses Dubliners A Portrait Finnegans Wake |
 | | 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. |  | | *Daughter of Joyce's friend Ettore Schmitz and one of his English pupils when he lived in Trieste. |  | | ~ Music from the Works of James Joyce ~ |
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http://www.james-joyce-music.com
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| | The JoyceColl Collection |
 | | The selected works compiled in the James 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 James Joyce's literary works. |  | | James Joyce and the Making of 'Ulysses', and Other Writings |  | | A Gaelic Lexicon for Finnegans Wake, and Glossary for Joyce's Other Works |
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http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/JoyceColl
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| | The San Antonio College LitWeb James Joyce Page |
 | | Ellmann was the premier Joyce scholar, and his picture adorns the walls of bookstores from Dublin to Galway. |  | | Derek Attridge, The Cambridge Companion to James Joyce. |  | | Nicholas Fargnoli and Michael P. Gillespie, James Joyce A to Z: The Essential Reference to the Life and Work. |
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http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/joyce.htm
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| | IQ Infinity: the unknown James 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. |
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http://www.robotwisdom.com/jaj
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| | Flying By the Net 1: Introduction |
 | | Additions and corrections that are not in the printed James Joyce Quarterly version are in red. |  | | I have tried to include everything that has come to my attention, but I have limited the discussion here to secondary materials about Joyce's works and, because of space, have not included references to individual articles on Joyce that are available electronically. |  | | General Literature Sites with Lists of Joyce Links |
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http://publish.uwo.ca/~mgroden/flying1.html
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| | University of Texas Press: Joyce Studies Annual |
 | | Joyce and Trieste: From the Joyce Festival to the Trieste Joyce School |  | | 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 |
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http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/journals/jjsa.html
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| | Ulysses for Dummies |
 | | 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. |  | | Laden with obscure references and dogged by an ever-growing body of secondary literature, the book's reputation as a "difficult" work has placed a barrier between the book and its potential audience. |  | | ames Joyce's Ulysses has been hailed as a masterpiece since its publication in 1922. |
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http://www.bway.net/~hunger/ulysses.html
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| | 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. |  | | While he was there, he met with his friend and admirer, C.K. Ogden, an authority on the influence of language upon thought and the founder of the Orthological Institute. |
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http://www.finneganswake.org/joycereading.htm
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| | James 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. |
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http://www.levity.com/corduroy/joycehom.htm
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| | The James Joyce Society: Home Page |
 | | The James Joyce Society presents John McCourt of the Trieste Joyce School on "James Joyce and Irish Catholicism" on Tuesday, April 25 at 6:30 pm at the Gotham Book Mart, 16 East 46th Street, New York City |  | | Links: Follow links to the Finnegans Wake Society of New York and selected Joyce web pages for text, criticism, media, and discussion.... |  | | The James Joyce Society, founded in 1947, is devoted to the appreciation of the life, works, and significance of the Irish author (1882-1941). |
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http://joycesociety.org
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| | James Joyce links |
 | | The James Joyce Broadsheet: information on subscriptions and for contributors. |  | | Schoenhof's Foreign Books has a small collection of books by and about Joyce in a variety of languages currently featured on the home page of our Web site ( |  | | James Joyce Quarterly: published by the University of Tulsa. |
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http://www.as.miami.edu/english/jjls/joylink.htm
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| | James Joyce @Web English Teacher |
 | | Wallace Gray's Notes for James Joyce's "The Dead" |  | | A Teacher's Guide to the Signet Classic Edition of James Joyce's Dubliners |  | | Scroll down for a list of motifs in the story. |
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http://www.webenglishteacher.com/joyce.html
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| | James Joyce portal |
 | | NOTE to undergrads: If you need more info on a short story by James Joyce, those links are here under the title of the whole collection: Dubliners. |  | | Zines: JJ Quarterly, JJ Literary Supplement, JJ Broadsheet, Joyce Studies Annual, European Joyce Studies, Newestlatter, Hypermedia Joyce Studies, Abiko Quarterly, Wake Newslitter. |  | | , pix and sounds, Ulysses, Ulysses, Joyce, deathmask, houses, |
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http://www.robotwisdom.com/jaj/portal.html
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| | James Joyce Centre - Dublin Ireland |
 | | The Centre is dedicated to promoting an understanding of the life and works of James Joyce and aims to provide a unique, personal view of the man, his work and his minutely observed origins. |  | | The Centre is an active, vibrant and ever-evolving tribute to one of the world's most profound surveyors of the human landscape, a starting point from which to begin a personal odyssey through Joyces life, work and source of inspiration. |  | | Evoking period and place, it provides an intimate and accessible introduction to James Joyce and the heroic commonplace still evident in his city. |
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http://www.jamesjoyce.ie/home
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| | poldy.com - the all Ulysses bookstore! |
 | | Welcome to Poldy.com, a virtual bookstore dedicated entirely to selling different editions of James Joyce's Ulysses. |  | | Ulysses: A Reader's Edition (edited by Danis Rose) |  | | Proprietors of Northwest Passages since 1996, we opened the virtual doors of poldy.com in 1997 when we became aware that the controversial Rose edition of Ulysses would not be available for sale in the United States. |
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http://www.poldy.com
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| | The Classic Text: James Joyce |
 | | Pound sought material for serialization in the magazine, and Joyce agreed to submit installments of Ulysses with Pound as an intermediary. |  | | During this period, Joyce embroidered continuously on the Odyssean theme, with textual discrepancies increasing as he added to various circulating copies. |  | | Joyce joked that Ulysses should "give Universities something to work on well into the next century." With the 1992 copyright expiration, there has been yet another explosion in Joycean scholarship and controversy. |
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http://www.uwm.edu/Library/special/exhibits/clastext/clspg158.htm
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| | James Joyce |
 | | Jorn Barger's "Robot Wisdom" site, James Joyce pages TOC |  | | "Bloom Book Brings Joyce's Leopold to Rich, New Life" by Martin Hintz |  | | A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (.uk; online book) |
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http://www.levity.com/corduroy/joyce.htm
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| | JAMES JOYCE'S PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST |
 | | BIOGRAPHY for the first of several screens devoted to Joyce's life and times. |  | | This page is an attempt to help new readers and old fans of James Joyce's book A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by providing on-line some information about the book and its writing. |  | | For a set of notes on Portrait explaining phrases in foreign languages or in local dialect such as "non serviam" or "greaves in his number"--basically, the footnotes to my edition of the novel--click on NOTES. |
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http://web.nwe.ufl.edu/~kershner/port.html
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| | Kitty O'Shea |
 | | These windows tell the story of Ulysses chapter by chapter. |  | | Entertainment within the James Joyce bar consists of traditional and contemporary music, live sports coverage including GAA matches. |  | | There are 12 stained glass windows in this pub which were commissioned especially for the James Joyce by Irelands foremost stained-glass artist, Bill Earley, in conjunction with Professor Terry Dolan of University College Dublin, Alma Mater of James Joyce. |
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http://www.kittyosheas.com/james_joyce_paris.asp
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| | Famous Irish Lives - James Joyce |
 | | In 1914 the book was published in England, and |  | | James Joyce Tower, Sandycove, a museum of Joyceana. |  | | Joyce and Nora finally married in 1931, and in 1940 returned to Zurich, where he died on 13 January 1941. |
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http://www.irelandseye.com/aarticles/history/people/whoswho/joyce.shtm
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| | James Joyce Resource Center Home Page |
 | | The purpose of this page is to provide a primary reference source for anyone interested in Joyce studies. |  | | This page and its related links will be directed towards providing a resource for anyone studying Joyce who would like information relevant to Joyce studies on a wide variety of topics including but not limited to Joyce on the internet. |  | | A Casebook of Critical Approaches to Joyce Studies |
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http://english.osu.edu/organizations/ijjf/jrc
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| | Great Books Index - James Joyce |
 | | -- Links to more James Joyce resources, maintained by Jorn Barger. |  | | -- A James Joyce website, maintained by Jorn Barger. |  | | -- Hosts the above bibliography, and other Joyce resources. |
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http://books.mirror.org/gb.joyce.html
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| | IJJF Homepage |
 | | The International James Joyce Foundation was created in 1967 at the First International James Joyce Symposium, held on Bloomsday--June 16--in Dublin. |  | | Anyone interested in the aims of The International James Joyce Foundation may join by the payment of dues. |  | | A central function of the Foundation is its sponsorship of the International James Joyce Symposium, held every other year around Bloomsday. |
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http://english.osu.edu/organizations/ijjf
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| | James Joyce Ramble 10K - Dedham Massachusetts |
 | | If you partipated in Sunday's James Joyce Ramble, the chances are very good that we have a photo of you posted at... |  | | Jill Carroll and others like her who seek the news in conditions of great danger. |  | | We join Reporters san Frontiers and all human rights organizations in petitioning on behalf of the rights of journalists everywhere to practice this most essential tool of a free society, as well as societies fighting for freedom. |
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http://www.ramble.org
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