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James Joyce [1882-1941] IRL
Ranked #96 in the top 380 poets
Votes 73%: 396 up, 148 down

"Polyphonic". 	Stream of consciousness, interior monologue, parody, jokes, literary allusions, free dream associations, references to a character's psychic reality rather than to his external surroundings. Though most of his adult life was spent abroad, Joyce's fictional universe centres on Dublin, and is populated largely by characters who closely resemble family members, enemies and friends from his time there.

James Augustine Aloysius Joyce  was an Irish writer now more noted for his novels tan his poems but who nevertheless achieved great success in both areas in his lifetime.Joyce was born in Dublin, where his father was a rates collector. He was educated at a Jesuit school and University College, Dublin where he studied philosophy and language. When he was still an undergraduate, in 1900, his long review of Ibsen`s last play was published in the "Fortnightly Review". At this time he also began writing his poems which were later collected in "Chamber Music", published in 1907.In 1902 Joyce left Dublin for Paris, but returned the following year as his mother was dying. From 1904 he lived with Nora Barnacle, whom he married in 1931 (the year his father died), a son was born in 1905, and a daughter in 1918. Their home from 1905 to 1915 was Trieste, where Joyce taught English at the Berlitz school. In 1909 and 1912 he made his final trips to Ireland, attempting to arrange the publication of his first book "Dubliners", which finally appeared in England in 1914. It was during this time that he was contacted by Ezra Pound, a leading champion of modernist writers who helped organise financial payments to keep Joyce writing during his most poverty-stricken periods.

"Dubliners" is a series of short, interrelated stories which dealt with the lives of ordinary people, whose actions are invested with a symbolic profundity. Joyce explores what would become central themes in his work: youth, adolescence, adulthood and maturity, and how identify is affected by these different stages in life.

The following year, Joyce wrote "Exiles", his only play, and went into permanent exile himself. 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. The year 1914 was an intensely productive one for Joyce; he had two books in print and began work on his greatest achievement, "Ulysses". In 1916 "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man" appeared (it had been published in serial form in "The Egoist" from 1914 to 1915), and established Joyce`s reputation as a writer of genius. The fullest and most accomplished product to have emerged from the modernist movement in European literature, it presented the world of Dublin solely through the consciousness of the narrator, and charted his growth from Catholic boyhood to an early adulthood defined by a yearning to be an artist.

It was in this year that Joyce and his family moved to Zurich, where they lived in great poverty while he worked on "Ulysses", despite undergoing surgery on his eyes. It began to appear in serial form in the "Little Review" in 1918, but was suspended in 1920 following prosecution. 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. The first unlimited edition followed in 1924, again in Paris, but there was no American edition until ten years later, and no British edition until 1937.

The novel traces the experiences of Mr Leopold Bloom, his wife Molly (whose erotic reverie towards the book`s close is what caused most of the legal difficulties) and the poet Stephen Dedalus from "A Portrait of the Artist" during a single day in Dublin in 1904. As its title suggests, however, the book is an epic, loosely analogous to Homer`s "Odyssey", which is echoed in several episodes. Enormously long and complex, using a variety of styles - notably the `stream-of-consciousness` method - "Ulysses" is one of the great literary achievments of the century, and has been described as the greatest novel ever written.

Joyce`s other major novel, "Finnegans Wake", is even more uncompromising than "Ulysses", written in a language of his own devising, a great mixture of linguistic fragments and borrowings. It was published in 1939, the year after the Joyces returned to Switzerland from France. Joyce died the following year. His reputation has grown immeasurably since his death, partly because of the growth in academia. He is the one novelist in whom we can be sure to place our absolute trust, the single figure we can also be sure will be remembered, if any are, in 1,000 year`s times. As one critic famously wrote: `James Joyce was and remains almost unique among novelists in that he published nothing but masterpieces`.

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Agnosticism, Difficult, Expressionism, Modernism, Nonsense

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
-800--700
GRC
Homer
→ influenced James Joyce
1834-1896
ENG
William Morris
→ influenced James Joyce
1888-1965
USA/ENG
Thomas Stearns Eliot
→ influenced James Joyce
1779-1852
IRL
Thomas Moore
← cited by James Joyce
1882-1950
IRL
James Stephens
← friend of James Joyce
1899-1986
ARG
Jorge Luis Borges
← influenced by James Joyce
1914-1953
WAL
Dylan Thomas
← influenced by James Joyce
1922-1969
USA
Jack Kerouac
← influenced by James Joyce


WorkLangRating
Bahnhofstrasse
eng
10
All day I hear the noise of waters
eng
9
Of That So Sweet Imprisonment
eng
5
Tutto รจ Sciolto
eng
5
Alone
eng
4
Strings in the Earth and Air
eng
4
A Flower Given to My Daughter
eng
3
At That Hour
eng
3
I Hear an Army
eng
3
A Memory of the Players in a Mirror at Midnight
eng
2
Dear Heart
eng
2
The Twilight Turns
eng
2
A Prayer
eng
1
Gentle Lady, Do Not Sing
eng
1
I Would in That Sweet Bosom Be
eng
1
In the Dark Pine-Wood
eng
1
Nightpiece
eng
1
O Sweetheart, Hear You
eng
1
She Weeps over Rahoon
eng
1
Sleep Now, O Sleep Now
eng
1
The Ballad of Persse O`Reilly
eng
1
Thou Leanest to the Shell of Night
eng
1
Watching the Needleboats at San Sabba
eng
1
Be Not Sad
eng
0
Because Your Voice Was at My Side
eng
0
Bid Adieu
eng
0
Bright Cap and Streamers
eng
0
Ecce Puer
eng
0
Flood
eng
0
From Dewy Dreams
eng
0
Go Seek Her Out
eng
0
He Who Hath Glory Lost
eng
0
Lean Out of the Window
eng
0
Lightly Come or Lightly Go
eng
0
Love Came to Us
eng
0
My Dove, My Beautiful One
eng
0
My Love Is in a Light Attire
eng
0
Now, O Now in This Brown Land
eng
0
O Cool Is the Valley Now
eng
0
O, It Was Out by Donnycarney
eng
0
On the Beach at Fontana
eng
0
Rain Has Fallen All the Day
eng
0
Silently She`s Combing
eng
0
Simples
eng
0
This Heart That Flutters Near My Heart
eng
0
Though I Thy Mithridates Were
eng
0
Tilly
eng
0
What Counsel Has the Hooded Moon
eng
0
When the Star Goes Forth in Heaven
eng
0
Who Goes Amid the Green Wood
eng
0
Winds of May
eng
0

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