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ALL 2020
The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike.TOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible.DUBLINERS TOUR
April 14 @ 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm. €10 – €12. « Introducing Joyce’s Dublin Tour. Ulysses For All 2020 – Spring/Summer Course – Sold Out ». Joyce once referred to Dublin as the ‘centre of paralysis’, a city that he felt was backward and repressive in contrast to the modern capitals of Europe. ANNOUNCING JESSICA PEEL-YATES AS THE NEW JAMES JOYCE The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. ‘COLOURFUL CREATIONS IN JOYCE AND BOSCH’ May 11, 2020 @ 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm. We are thrilled to have Dr. Christine O’Neill deliver her lecture as the final part of this Spring/Sumer Lecture series. The works of James Joyce and Hieronymus Bosch are famous for their inventiveness and colourful creations, and both draw on biblical stories and late medieval Christian imagery.OLD MOTHER GROGAN
Old Mother Grogan. Mother Grogan is a mildly rude joke, characteristically brought up by Mulligan and quickly used to skewer Haines’ attitude toward Ireland and things Irish. Haines is collecting “exotic” Irish sayings and other folk esoterica, in the same way Bartok, Dvorak and Smetana collected ethnic folk tunes fromthe backwaters of
VOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellGIAMBATTISTA VICO
On this day23 June. On 23 June 1668 Giambattista Vico was born. The eighteenth-century Italian philosopher and rhetorician Giambattista Vico was born in Naples on 23 June 1668. The theory of history that Vico proposed in his best-known work, Scienza nuova (New Science, 1725), was of importance to Joyce in the composition of Finnegans WakeMICHAEL HEALY
On this day29 July. On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. He wrote to John Howley, the College Librarian on 29 July about ON THIS DAY…14 JULY On 14 July 1904 the Freeman’s Journal reported on a fatal accident at Sydney Parade. The accident took place on Wednesday 13 July when Mrs Sarah Bishop, wife of the Station Master at Sydney Parade, was attempting to cross the line. Joyce used reports of Mrs Bishop’s death as background for his story ‘A Painful Case,’ written a yearlater.
THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike.TOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible.DUBLINERS TOUR
April 14 @ 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm. €10 – €12. « Introducing Joyce’s Dublin Tour. Ulysses For All 2020 – Spring/Summer Course – Sold Out ». Joyce once referred to Dublin as the ‘centre of paralysis’, a city that he felt was backward and repressive in contrast to the modern capitals of Europe. ANNOUNCING JESSICA PEEL-YATES AS THE NEW JAMES JOYCE The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. ‘COLOURFUL CREATIONS IN JOYCE AND BOSCH’ May 11, 2020 @ 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm. We are thrilled to have Dr. Christine O’Neill deliver her lecture as the final part of this Spring/Sumer Lecture series. The works of James Joyce and Hieronymus Bosch are famous for their inventiveness and colourful creations, and both draw on biblical stories and late medieval Christian imagery.OLD MOTHER GROGAN
Old Mother Grogan. Mother Grogan is a mildly rude joke, characteristically brought up by Mulligan and quickly used to skewer Haines’ attitude toward Ireland and things Irish. Haines is collecting “exotic” Irish sayings and other folk esoterica, in the same way Bartok, Dvorak and Smetana collected ethnic folk tunes fromthe backwaters of
VOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellGIAMBATTISTA VICO
On this day23 June. On 23 June 1668 Giambattista Vico was born. The eighteenth-century Italian philosopher and rhetorician Giambattista Vico was born in Naples on 23 June 1668. The theory of history that Vico proposed in his best-known work, Scienza nuova (New Science, 1725), was of importance to Joyce in the composition of Finnegans WakeMICHAEL HEALY
On this day29 July. On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. He wrote to John Howley, the College Librarian on 29 July about ON THIS DAY…14 JULY On 14 July 1904 the Freeman’s Journal reported on a fatal accident at Sydney Parade. The accident took place on Wednesday 13 July when Mrs Sarah Bishop, wife of the Station Master at Sydney Parade, was attempting to cross the line. Joyce used reports of Mrs Bishop’s death as background for his story ‘A Painful Case,’ written a yearlater.
BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. The day is named after Leopold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses. The novel follows the life and thoughts of Leopold Bloom and a host of other characters –real
BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration.CHAMBER MUSIC
Chamber Music is a collection of thirty-six poems, all accessible to the Joycean novice. Chamber Music is essentially a collection of love poems written in different styles, composed and revised between 1901 and 1906. Elkin Mathews of London published the first edition in 1907, the same year he refused Joyce’s manuscript for Dubliners.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in his READING DUBLINERS: A CITY BETRAYED? “I call the series Dubliners to betray the soul of that hemiplegia or paralysis which many consider a city.” (Joyce, letter to Constantine Curran, August 1904) Following the success of the ‘Ulysses for All’ reading group, the James Joyce Centre is pleased to announce the launch of ‘Reading Dubliners: A City Betrayed?’ – a new and exciting structured reading group that will run ON THIS DAY…8 JUNE James and Gretta Cousins lived at 22 Dromard Terrace, Sandymount, and had their ‘at home’ there on Wednesday evenings. On the evening of Wednesday 8 June 1904 Joyce was one of the guests at their ‘at home’ and sang some songs. Among the other guests there that evening was Joseph Holloway (1861-1944), an architect with a passion fortheatre.
ON THIS DAY…15 MAY On 15 May 1859 Mary Jane Murray was born. Joyce’s mother, Mary Jane Murray, known as May, was born in the Eagle House tavern in Terenure on 15 May 1859. Her father, John Murray, came from Longford and was an agent for wine and spirits, while her mother came from a long line of Dublin businessmen. May Murray’s brothers William and John wereCLIVE KEMPTHORPE
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. MARGARET ALICE (‘POPPIE’ Margaret Alice (‘Poppie’ – later Sister Mary Gertrude) Joyce (18 January 1884, Dublin – 1 March 1964, New Zealand) The eldest of Joyce’s sisters, Margaret Alice Joyce (known to the family as ‘Poppie’) was born on 18 January 1884 and baptised at the chapel of ease, St Joseph’s Church, Roundtown (now Terenure), on 27January.
TERENCE KILLEEN
Talk by Terence Killeen, Mon 2 Dec 2013. Please note: This talk is now booked out! Joyce scholar Terence Killeen will deliver his talk entitled “Lots of Fun at Finnegans Wake?” at the Centre on Monday 2nd December 2013, 6.30pm. Terence Killeen is the James Joyce Centre Research scholar, and has written extensively on Joyce’s works in THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike.TOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. The day is named after Leopold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses. The novel follows the life and thoughts of Leopold Bloom and a host of other characters –real
BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration. EPIPHANIES – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Joyce’s Epiphanies. The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January each year, and commemorates the revelation of Jesus’ divinity to the Magi, the three wise men who had followed the star to Christ’s birthplace. Derived from Greek, the word ‘epiphany’ means a sudden manifestation of deity.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in hisDUBLINERS TOUR
April 14 @ 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm. €10 – €12. « Introducing Joyce’s Dublin Tour. Ulysses For All 2020 – Spring/Summer Course – Sold Out ». Joyce once referred to Dublin as the ‘centre of paralysis’, a city that he felt was backward and repressive in contrast to the modern capitals of Europe.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work, was created over a period of sixteen years with composition starting in 1923. It was finally completed and published in May 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy. The obscurity of the text meant that many lost faith in his last artistic venture,finding it
MICHAEL HEALY
On this day29 July. On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. He wrote to John Howley, the College Librarian on 29 July aboutVOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sell THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike.TOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. The day is named after Leopold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses. The novel follows the life and thoughts of Leopold Bloom and a host of other characters –real
BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration. EPIPHANIES – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Joyce’s Epiphanies. The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January each year, and commemorates the revelation of Jesus’ divinity to the Magi, the three wise men who had followed the star to Christ’s birthplace. Derived from Greek, the word ‘epiphany’ means a sudden manifestation of deity.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in hisDUBLINERS TOUR
April 14 @ 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm. €10 – €12. « Introducing Joyce’s Dublin Tour. Ulysses For All 2020 – Spring/Summer Course – Sold Out ». Joyce once referred to Dublin as the ‘centre of paralysis’, a city that he felt was backward and repressive in contrast to the modern capitals of Europe.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work, was created over a period of sixteen years with composition starting in 1923. It was finally completed and published in May 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy. The obscurity of the text meant that many lost faith in his last artistic venture,finding it
MICHAEL HEALY
On this day29 July. On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. He wrote to John Howley, the College Librarian on 29 July aboutVOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellFINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work, was created over a period of sixteen years with composition starting in 1923. It was finally completed and published in May 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy. The obscurity of the text meant that many lost faith in his last artistic venture,finding it
ON THIS DAY…1 JULY On 1 July 1905 Joyce finished writing ‘The Boarding House.’. ‘The Boarding House’ is the seventh story in Joyce’s Dubliners, but was the fifth story he wrote. The manuscript is dated 1 July 1905. Three stories by Joyce had already been published in the Irish Homestead magazine in 1904-5, but aVOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellGIORGIO JOYCE
On this day26 December. On 26 December 1937 Joyce dined with Samuel Beckett and Peggy Guggenheim. The day after Christmas Day 1937 the Joyces dined at Fouquet’s restaurant in the company of Samuel Beckett and Peggy Guggenheim. The evening was the beginning of a brief but very intense affair between Beckett and Guggenheim.OLD MOTHER GROGAN
Old Mother Grogan. Mother Grogan is a mildly rude joke, characteristically brought up by Mulligan and quickly used to skewer Haines’ attitude toward Ireland and things Irish. Haines is collecting “exotic” Irish sayings and other folk esoterica, in the same way Bartok, Dvorak and Smetana collected ethnic folk tunes fromthe backwaters of
INTERNAL MONOLOGUE
The flashback continues. Stephen is thinking about his mother, thinking about her room and objects he identifies with herNOBEL PRIZE
On 26 November 1926 Joyce sent congratulations to George Bernard Shaw. Shaw had been awarded the Nobel Prize for literature for 1925, and Joyce wrote on 26 November 1926 to congratulate him. Joyce offered his felicitations to Shaw, and expressed satisfaction that the Nobel Prize for literature had gone to a fellow Dubliner once again.GIAMBATTISTA VICO
On this day23 June. On 23 June 1668 Giambattista Vico was born. The eighteenth-century Italian philosopher and rhetorician Giambattista Vico was born in Naples on 23 June 1668. The theory of history that Vico proposed in his best-known work, Scienza nuova (New Science, 1725), was of importance to Joyce in the composition of Finnegans WakeNICOLÒ VIDACOVICH
On this day16 December. On 16 December 1912 Joyce wrote to Yeats about The Countess Cathleen. One of Joyce’s students, Nicolò Vidacovich, had made an Italian translation of part WB Yeats’ play The Countess Cathleen, but Yeats did not want it published. Joyce wrote a number of letters to Yeats trying to persuade him to allow VidacovichBELVEDERE COLLEGE
On 3 May 1902 George Joyce died. The youngest boy in the family, George was born on his father’s birthday, 4 July 1887. According to Richard Ellmann, he showed signs of his elder brother’s wit and intelligence, and he was popular not only at home but also atBelvedere College
THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike.TOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. The day is named after Leopold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses. The novel follows the life and thoughts of Leopold Bloom and a host of other characters –real
BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in his EPIPHANIES – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Joyce’s Epiphanies. The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January each year, and commemorates the revelation of Jesus’ divinity to the Magi, the three wise men who had followed the star to Christ’s birthplace. Derived from Greek, the word ‘epiphany’ means a sudden manifestation of deity.DUBLINERS TOUR
April 14 @ 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm. €10 – €12. « Introducing Joyce’s Dublin Tour. Ulysses For All 2020 – Spring/Summer Course – Sold Out ». Joyce once referred to Dublin as the ‘centre of paralysis’, a city that he felt was backward and repressive in contrast to the modern capitals of Europe.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work, was created over a period of sixteen years with composition starting in 1923. It was finally completed and published in May 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy. The obscurity of the text meant that many lost faith in his last artistic venture,finding it
VOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellMICHAEL HEALY
On this day29 July. On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. He wrote to John Howley, the College Librarian on 29 July about THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike.TOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. The day is named after Leopold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses. The novel follows the life and thoughts of Leopold Bloom and a host of other characters –real
BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in his EPIPHANIES – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Joyce’s Epiphanies. The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January each year, and commemorates the revelation of Jesus’ divinity to the Magi, the three wise men who had followed the star to Christ’s birthplace. Derived from Greek, the word ‘epiphany’ means a sudden manifestation of deity.DUBLINERS TOUR
April 14 @ 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm. €10 – €12. « Introducing Joyce’s Dublin Tour. Ulysses For All 2020 – Spring/Summer Course – Sold Out ». Joyce once referred to Dublin as the ‘centre of paralysis’, a city that he felt was backward and repressive in contrast to the modern capitals of Europe.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work, was created over a period of sixteen years with composition starting in 1923. It was finally completed and published in May 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy. The obscurity of the text meant that many lost faith in his last artistic venture,finding it
VOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellMICHAEL HEALY
On this day29 July. On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. He wrote to John Howley, the College Librarian on 29 July about THE JAMES JOYCE INSTITUTE OF IRELAND READING GROUP THE JAMES JOYCE INSTITUTE OF IRELAND is the longest-established Joyce Society in Dublin. It meets on Tuesday evenings from mid-September to mid-June at 7.30 in the James Joyce Centre to read and discuss Joyce’s works. Occasional lectures, outings, social events and field trips of Joycean interest are also arranged.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work, was created over a period of sixteen years with composition starting in 1923. It was finally completed and published in May 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy. The obscurity of the text meant that many lost faith in his last artistic venture,finding it
VOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellGIORGIO JOYCE
On this day26 December. On 26 December 1937 Joyce dined with Samuel Beckett and Peggy Guggenheim. The day after Christmas Day 1937 the Joyces dined at Fouquet’s restaurant in the company of Samuel Beckett and Peggy Guggenheim. The evening was the beginning of a brief but very intense affair between Beckett and Guggenheim.INTERNAL MONOLOGUE
The flashback continues. Stephen is thinking about his mother, thinking about her room and objects he identifies with herOLD MOTHER GROGAN
Old Mother Grogan. Mother Grogan is a mildly rude joke, characteristically brought up by Mulligan and quickly used to skewer Haines’ attitude toward Ireland and things Irish. Haines is collecting “exotic” Irish sayings and other folk esoterica, in the same way Bartok, Dvorak and Smetana collected ethnic folk tunes fromthe backwaters of
NOBEL PRIZE
On 26 November 1926 Joyce sent congratulations to George Bernard Shaw. Shaw had been awarded the Nobel Prize for literature for 1925, and Joyce wrote on 26 November 1926 to congratulate him. Joyce offered his felicitations to Shaw, and expressed satisfaction that the Nobel Prize for literature had gone to a fellow Dubliner once again.GIAMBATTISTA VICO
On this day23 June. On 23 June 1668 Giambattista Vico was born. The eighteenth-century Italian philosopher and rhetorician Giambattista Vico was born in Naples on 23 June 1668. The theory of history that Vico proposed in his best-known work, Scienza nuova (New Science, 1725), was of importance to Joyce in the composition of Finnegans WakeNICOLÒ VIDACOVICH
On this day16 December. On 16 December 1912 Joyce wrote to Yeats about The Countess Cathleen. One of Joyce’s students, Nicolò Vidacovich, had made an Italian translation of part WB Yeats’ play The Countess Cathleen, but Yeats did not want it published. Joyce wrote a number of letters to Yeats trying to persuade him to allow VidacovichBELVEDERE COLLEGE
On 3 May 1902 George Joyce died. The youngest boy in the family, George was born on his father’s birthday, 4 July 1887. According to Richard Ellmann, he showed signs of his elder brother’s wit and intelligence, and he was popular not only at home but also atBelvedere College
THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike.TOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. The day is named after Leopold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses. The novel follows the life and thoughts of Leopold Bloom and a host of other characters –real
BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration. EPIPHANIES – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Joyce’s Epiphanies. The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January each year, and commemorates the revelation of Jesus’ divinity to the Magi, the three wise men who had followed the star to Christ’s birthplace. Derived from Greek, the word ‘epiphany’ means a sudden manifestation of deity.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in hisMICHAEL HEALY
On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach.VOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellGIAMBATTISTA VICO
On this day23 June. On 23 June 1668 Giambattista Vico was born. The eighteenth-century Italian philosopher and rhetorician Giambattista Vico was born in Naples on 23 June 1668. The theory of history that Vico proposed in his best-known work, Scienza nuova (New Science, 1725), was of importance to Joyce in the composition of Finnegans WakeNICOLÒ VIDACOVICH
On this day16 December. On 16 December 1912 Joyce wrote to Yeats about The Countess Cathleen. One of Joyce’s students, Nicolò Vidacovich, had made an Italian translation of part WB Yeats’ play The Countess Cathleen, but Yeats did not want it published. Joyce wrote a number of letters to Yeats trying to persuade him to allow Vidacovich THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike.TOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. The day is named after Leopold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses. The novel follows the life and thoughts of Leopold Bloom and a host of other characters –real
BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration. EPIPHANIES – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Joyce’s Epiphanies. The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January each year, and commemorates the revelation of Jesus’ divinity to the Magi, the three wise men who had followed the star to Christ’s birthplace. Derived from Greek, the word ‘epiphany’ means a sudden manifestation of deity.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in hisMICHAEL HEALY
On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach.VOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sellGIAMBATTISTA VICO
On this day23 June. On 23 June 1668 Giambattista Vico was born. The eighteenth-century Italian philosopher and rhetorician Giambattista Vico was born in Naples on 23 June 1668. The theory of history that Vico proposed in his best-known work, Scienza nuova (New Science, 1725), was of importance to Joyce in the composition of Finnegans WakeNICOLÒ VIDACOVICH
On this day16 December. On 16 December 1912 Joyce wrote to Yeats about The Countess Cathleen. One of Joyce’s students, Nicolò Vidacovich, had made an Italian translation of part WB Yeats’ play The Countess Cathleen, but Yeats did not want it published. Joyce wrote a number of letters to Yeats trying to persuade him to allow Vidacovich EPIPHANIES – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Joyce’s Epiphanies. The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January each year, and commemorates the revelation of Jesus’ divinity to the Magi, the three wise men who had followed the star to Christ’s birthplace. Derived from Greek, the word ‘epiphany’ means a sudden manifestation of deity. THE JAMES JOYCE INSTITUTE OF IRELAND READING GROUP THE JAMES JOYCE INSTITUTE OF IRELAND is the longest-established Joyce Society in Dublin. It meets on Tuesday evenings from mid-September to mid-June at 7.30 in the James Joyce Centre to read and discuss Joyce’s works. Occasional lectures, outings, social events and field trips of Joycean interest are also arranged. CONTACT US – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Update 25th March 2020: Due to the measures put in place by the Irish Government to combat the spread of COVID-19, The James Joyce Cultural Centre is closed to the public until the 20th of April, 2020. The safety of staff and visitors is paramount for us at this time. If you have booked a ticket for a walking tour, our team will be in contactwith you soon.
BLOOMSDAY – THE HISTORY AND TRADITION – THE JAMES JOYCE … Bloomsday celebrates the day on which the action of James Joyce’s novel Ulysses takes place, 16 June 1904, the day on which (we believe) Joyce first went out with his future wife, Nora Barnacle.The day is named after Leopold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses.The novel follows the life and thoughts of Leopold Bloom and a host of other characters – real and fictional – from 8am onVOLTA CINEMA
On this day18 April. On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing of a group of Triestine businessmen. But, by April 1910, Joyce’s partners felt the enterprise had failed and they wrote to say they wanted to sell ON THIS DAY…1 JULY On 1 July 1905 Joyce finished writing ‘The Boarding House.’. ‘The Boarding House’ is the seventh story in Joyce’s Dubliners, but was the fifth story he wrote. The manuscript is dated 1 July 1905. Three stories by Joyce had already been published in the Irish Homestead magazine in 1904-5, but aOLD MOTHER GROGAN
Old Mother Grogan. Mother Grogan is a mildly rude joke, characteristically brought up by Mulligan and quickly used to skewer Haines’ attitude toward Ireland and things Irish. Haines is collecting “exotic” Irish sayings and other folk esoterica, in the same way Bartok, Dvorak and Smetana collected ethnic folk tunes fromthe backwaters of
INTERNAL MONOLOGUE
The flashback continues. Stephen is thinking about his mother, thinking about her room and objects he identifies with herNOBEL PRIZE
On 26 November 1926 Joyce sent congratulations to George Bernard Shaw. Shaw had been awarded the Nobel Prize for literature for 1925, and Joyce wrote on 26 November 1926 to congratulate him. Joyce offered his felicitations to Shaw, and expressed satisfaction that the Nobel Prize for literature had gone to a fellow Dubliner once again.BELVEDERE COLLEGE
On 3 May 1902 George Joyce died. The youngest boy in the family, George was born on his father’s birthday, 4 July 1887. According to Richard Ellmann, he showed signs of his elder brother’s wit and intelligence, and he was popular not only at home but also atBelvedere College
THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
About James Joyce. James Joyce (1882 – 1941) is one of Ireland’s most influential and celebrated writers. His most famous work is Ulysses (1922) which follows the movements of Leopold Bloom through a single day on June 16th, 1904. Ulysses is based on Homer’s The Odyssey.Some of Joyce’s other major works include the short story collection Dubliners (1914), and novels A Portrait of theTOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE What is Bloomsday? Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in his THE JAMES JOYCE INSTITUTE OF IRELAND READING GROUP The James Joyce Institute of Ireland Reading Group Tuesdays at 7:30pm. THE JAMES JOYCE INSTITUTE OF IRELAND is the longest-established JoyceSociety in Dublin.
MICHAEL HEALY
On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach.VOLTA CINEMA
On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing ofGIAMBATTISTA VICO
On 23 June 1668 Giambattista Vico was born. The eighteenth-century Italian philosopher and rhetorician Giambattista Vico was born in Naples on 23 June 1668.NICOLÒ VIDACOVICH
On 16 December 1912 Joyce wrote to Yeats about The Countess Cathleen. One of Joyce’s students, Nicolò Vidacovich, had made an Italian translation of part WB Yeats’ play The Countess Cathleen, but Yeats did not want it published. THE JAMES JOYCE CENTREVISIT USTOURSEXHIBITIONSCONTACTNEWSULYSSES FORALL 2020
About James Joyce. James Joyce (1882 – 1941) is one of Ireland’s most influential and celebrated writers. His most famous work is Ulysses (1922) which follows the movements of Leopold Bloom through a single day on June 16th, 1904. Ulysses is based on Homer’s The Odyssey.Some of Joyce’s other major works include the short story collection Dubliners (1914), and novels A Portrait of theTOURS & TICKETS
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. BLOOMSDAY – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE What is Bloomsday? Bloomsday is a celebration that takes place both in Dublin and around the world. It celebrates Thursday 16 June 1904, which is the day depicted in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration.FINNEGANS WAKE
Finnegans Wake, Joyce’s final work was created over a period of fifteen years with composition starting in 1923.It was finally completed in 1938. Joyce celebrated its eventual publication on February 2nd 1939. Like all of Joyce’s works Finnegans Wake was dogged by publication controversy.He found, due to the perceived obscurity of the text that even his closest allies lost faith in his THE JAMES JOYCE INSTITUTE OF IRELAND READING GROUP The James Joyce Institute of Ireland Reading Group Tuesdays at 7:30pm. THE JAMES JOYCE INSTITUTE OF IRELAND is the longest-established JoyceSociety in Dublin.
MICHAEL HEALY
On 29 July 1935 Joyce wrote to the Librarian of University College Galway about his gift of a copy of Pomes Penyeach. Through Nora Barnacle’s uncle, Michael Healy, Joyce had made a gift to University College Galway of a copy of Pomes Penyeach.VOLTA CINEMA
On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing ofGIAMBATTISTA VICO
On 23 June 1668 Giambattista Vico was born. The eighteenth-century Italian philosopher and rhetorician Giambattista Vico was born in Naples on 23 June 1668.NICOLÒ VIDACOVICH
On 16 December 1912 Joyce wrote to Yeats about The Countess Cathleen. One of Joyce’s students, Nicolò Vidacovich, had made an Italian translation of part WB Yeats’ play The Countess Cathleen, but Yeats did not want it published. EPIPHANIES – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Joyce’s Epiphanies The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January each year, and commemorates the revelation of Jesus’ divinity to the Magi, the three wise men who had followed the star to Christ’s birthplace. BLOOMSDAY FESTIVAL 2020 The Bloomsday Festival is a world famous literary street carnival in honour of James Joyce and his famous novel Ulysses that was set in Dublin on 16 June 1904.Experiencing Bloomsday in Dublin puts you at the heart of a moment in the Irish psyche. Since Bloomsday was first celebrated in Dublin in 1954, the Bloomsday Festival has developed into a colourful and diverse celebration. CONTACT US – THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE Update 25th March 2020: Due to the measures put in place by the Irish Government to combat the spread of COVID-19, The James Joyce Cultural Centre is closed to the public until the 20th of April, 2020. The safety of staff and visitors is paramount for us at this time. If you have booked a ticket for a walking tour, our team will be in contactwith you soon.
VOLTA CINEMA
On 18 April 1910 Joyce was contacted about closing the Volta cinema. The Volta was the first cinema in Dublin, opened in December 1909 by Joyce with the backing ofOLD MOTHER GROGAN
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible. ON THIS DAY…1 JULY On 1 July 1905 Joyce finished writing ‘The Boarding House.’ ‘The Boarding House’ is the seventh story in Joyce’s Dubliners, but was the fifth story he wrote.The manuscript is dated 1 July 1905. ON THIS DAY…2 OCTOBER On 2 October 1902 Joyce was entered on the Register of the Medical School. Having completed his studies at University College on St Stephen’s Green in 1902, Joyce decided to continue his studies at the University’s Medical School on Cecilia Street.INTERNAL MONOLOGUE
The flashback continues. Stephen is thinking about his mother, thinking about her room and objects he identifies with herBELVEDERE COLLEGE
On 3 May 1902 George Joyce died. The youngest boy in the family, George was born on his father’s birthday, 4 July 1887. According to Richard Ellmann, he showed signs of his elder brother’s wit and intelligence, and he was popular not only at home but also atBelvedere College
FR JOHN CONMEE
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Tel: 01 878 8547 Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible.Skip to content
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Writing Joyce – David Nolan (Shut Your Eyes and See Exhibition) _Due to Covid 19 government restrictions, the James Joyce Centre is currently closed and all activity has been moved online. Please note that the shop is not open and there are no tours running at this time. We hope to be able to welcome you back and resume activities soon._ The James Joyce Cultural Centre is situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse, offering visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence in literature. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops and lectures for visitors with a casual interest and Joycean experts alike. See the door to the famous No 7 Eccles Street from “Ulysses”, a recreation of his living quarters in Paris, art exhibitions and more which bring the author and hisworks to life.
ABOUT JAMES JOYCE
James Joyce (1882 – 1941) is one of Ireland’s most influential and celebrated writers. His most famous work is _Ulysses_ (1922) which follows the movements of Leopold Bloom through a single day on June 16th, 1904. _Ulysses_ is based on Homer’s _The Odyssey_. Some of Joyce’s other major works include the short story collection _Dubliners_ (1914), and novels _A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man_ (1916) and _Finnegans Wake_ (1939). Learn More _Due to Covid 19 government restrictions, the James Joyce Centre is currently closed and all activity has been moved online. Please note that there are no tours running at this time. We hope to be able to welcome you back and resume activities soon._COMING UP:
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The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street,Dublin 1, Ireland
Tel: 01 878 8547
Please note, only the ground floor is wheelchair–accessible.STAY IN TOUCH:
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