site map
travel blog
Accommodation
Car Hire
Deals
See & Do
Location
Dublin County
Dublin City
Dublin City Centre
Dublin Airport
Around North City Centre
Around South City Centre
Around Clontarf
Around Drumcondra Santry
Around Finglas Glasnevin
Around North County Dublin
Around South County Dublin
Around West County Dublin
Ballyboghil
Ballymun
Castlenock
Clondalkin
Clonsilla
Clontarf
Donabate
Drumcondra
Dun Laoghaire
Glasnevin
Howth
Killiney
Kilternan
Lucan
Lusk
Malahide
Mount merrion
Portmarnock
Portrane
Rathcoole
Rush
Saggart
Sandyford
Santry
Skerries
Stillorgan
Sutton
Swords
Tallaght
Dublin 1
Dublin 2
Dublin 3
Dublin 4
Dublin 5
Dublin 6
Dublin 7
Dublin 8
Dublin 9
Dublin 11
Dublin 12
Dublin 13
Dublin 14
Dublin 15
Dublin 16
Dublin 18
Dublin 20
Dublin 22
Dublin 24
Accommodation
Hotel & Guesthouses
Bed and Breakfast
Self-Catering
Hostel
Campus
Arrival Date
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Jul-2008
Aug-2008
Sep-2008
Oct-2008
Nov-2008
Dec-2008
Jan-2009
Feb-2009
Mar-2009
Apr-2009
May-2009
Jun-2009
Jul-2009
Aug-2009
Sep-2009
Oct-2009
Nov-2009
Dec-2009
Jan-2010
Feb-2010
Mar-2010
Apr-2010
May-2010
Jun-2010
Jul-2010
Nights
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
People
Adults
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Child (<12yrs)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Baby (<3yrs)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Please Enable Script
HOW?
car hire from €19.99
Choose a county
--- Select County ---
Antrim
Armagh
Carlow
Cavan
Clare
Cork
Derry
Donegal
Down
Dublin
Fermanagh
Galway
Kerry
Kildare
Kilkenny
Laois
Leitrim
Limerick
Longford
Louth
Mayo
Meath
Monaghan
Offaly
Roscommon
Sligo
Tipperary
Tyrone
Waterford
Westmeath
Wexford
Wicklow
james joyce
Home
>
dublin
>
dublin monuments
> james joyce
James Joyce
North Earl Street
Dublin 1
Dublin
Phone:
Fax:
More has been written about James Joyce than about Shakespeare.
The eldest son of a spendthrift who brought his large family from prosperity to poverty without relinquishing his standards, Joyce was educated by the Jesuits at Clongowes Wood College, one of the finest private schools in the country, until the money ran out.
He was then offered a free place at Belvedere College in the centre of Dublin to continue his secondary education. Precocious in many respects, he had his first sexual experiences with prostitutes at the age of fourteen.
He entered University College in 1898, having lost his Catholic faith and determined to devote his life to his art. Other students, and his lecturers, were amazed by the extent of his reading.
At the age of eighteen he had a piece on Ibsen's latest play published in "The Fortnightly Review", and a personal letter of thanks from Ibsen convinced him that he was destined for great things.
Particularly impressed by the great European writers, Joyce found the current Irish Revival too parochial for his taste.
Description
Description
Description
He called on AE in the small hours to complain about the movement, and, on his first meeting with Yeats, told him "I have met you too late. You are too old".
Language, religion and nationality were seen by Joyce as nets cast on his soul. Determined to escape, he went to Paris in 1902 to study medicine and lived there in Bohemian poverty until the following year when he returned to attend his mother in her final illness.
1904 was a special year for Joyce. The first of his short stories were published (by AE in "The Irish Homestead") and he began work on his book of poems, "Chamber Music", and on the autobiographical novel which was to become "A Portrait of the Artist and a Young Man".
He also stayed briefly with Oliver St John Gogarty in the Tower in Sandycove where he later set the first chapter of Ulysses. In June of that year he met his future wife Nora Barnacle, and the couple left Dublin in October to spend the rest of their lives on the Continent.
The Joyces lived at first in Trieste, where their two children were born. The money Joyce earned from teaching did not match up to his standards of extravagance, and he became an expert borrower.
One business venture involved a trip to Dublin in 1909 to set up Ireland's first cinema, the Volta in Mary Street. He also arranged with a Dublin publisher, George Roberts of Maunsel & Co., to publish his book of stories "Dubliners", but Roberts subsequently took exception to Joyce's mercilessly realistic picture of city life and stalled publication.
When Joyce revisited Dublin in 1912 to sort things out with Roberts destroyed the entire first edition, and Joyce left Dublin forever. "Dubliners" was published by Grant Richards in 1914.
Joyce's fortune improved when he moved to Zurich in 1915. Grants from patrons - especially the generous Harriet Weaver - and official funds enabled him to devote more time to writing, and with the help of Erza Pound he had "A Portrait" published in 1916.
The early chapters of "Ulysses" appeared in "The Little Review" in America but due to the frankness of its references to bodily functions the book was banned in Britain and the USA.
Joyce took up residence in Paris in 1920 and found a publisher - Sylvia Beach of Shakespeare and Company - for "Ulysses". The novel, which appeared on his fortieth birthday in 1922, is now regarded as one of the most significant works of modern literature.
At the time it was received with equal choruses of acclaim and hostility, while in Dublin, whose citizens, streets, shops and language formed the material of the book, it was greeted with embarrassment. It was not until 1934 that "Ulysses" could be published and sold in the United States and subsequently Britain. In Ireland, where it was never officially banned, it remained something of and underground masterpiece until the 1950's.
Joyce spent seventeen years on the last and most complex work, "Finnegans Wake", which like "Ulysses" was entirely based on his native city. Plagued by illness and failing eyesight, he shunned publicity and spent his time with his family and a few close friends, of whom Samuel Beckett was one.
"Finnegans Wake" was published in 1939; within two years Joyce died of peritonitis in Zurich, where he and his family had retreated from the terrors of war.
More than any other writer, James Joyce placed Dublin on the map of world literature. An exile for most of his life, he has become one of the world's most famous Dubliner, and is celebrated annually on 16th June, the day on which all the events of "Ulysses" take place and which is now known as Bloomsday'.
Accommodation in surrounding areas
Dublin 1
Hotels
Guesthouses
Bed and Breakfast
Self Catering
Hostels
Dublin City
Hotels
Guesthouses
Bed and Breakfast
Self Catering
Campus Accommodation
Castles
Hostels
Around North City Centre
Hotels
Guesthouses
Bed and Breakfast
Self Catering
Castles
Hostels
Dublin County
Hotels
Guesthouses
Bed and Breakfast
Self Catering
Campus Accommodation
Castles
Hostels