Book Description
James Joyce's Dublin Houses describes in detail the many houses in Dublin where the Joyce family lived. It reflects on the positive effect that the constant moving had on the young James Joyce, in providing him with an intimate knowledge of the city that was to become such an important backdrop to his work. It also provides detailed information for the reader on how to get to the various places. It concentrates on the houses where the Joyce family lived, also pinpointing the haunts of his characters, Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus. Vivien Igoe, an expert on Joyce, explains the background and origins of both Joyce and Nora Barnacle, who inspired the principal female character in Ulysses and Finnegans Wake. There is also information on where Joyce stayed on his return visits to Dublin in later life. While the book will be of interest to Joycean pilgrims and students of Anglo-Irish literature alike, it is also aimed at the general reader to provide a useful interpretative aid to Dubliners and Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.
About the Author
Vivien Igoe, a graduate of University College Dublin, is an authority on James Joyce. She has worked as Curator of the James Joyce Museum in Sandycove, Co. Dublin, lectures on Joyce and organized the first International James Joyce Symposium.
James Joyce's Dublin Houses FROM THE PUBLISHER
James Joyce's Dublin Houses describes in detail the many houses where the Joyce family lived, providing the author of Ulysses and Dubliners with an intimate knowledge of the city that was such an important backdrop to his work Concentrating on these houses, this book also pinpoints the haunts of his characters Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus, as well as those of his wife, Nora Barnacle, who inspired Molly Bloom, the principal female character in Ulysses.
Accompanied by photographs and maps, this is an invaluable guide and also provides derailed information for Joycean pilgrims visiting the various houses.