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The choreographer’s latest works, at the Joyce Theater, explore the music of James P. Johnson and John Luther Adams.
A literary walk through Dublin Bay leads to James Joyce’s Martello Tower, where history and sea swimmers bring "Ulysses" to life.
He said of Joyce that “for a boy of his age in a Dublin day school, he seems to have had considerable sexual experience. His sexuality formed the warring partner in the struggle towards his ...
Why does James Joyce's "Ulysses" matter so much? IrishCentral contributor Martin Burns celebrates James Joyce’s masterpiece "Ulysses", its journey through Dublin and what makes Leopold Bloom so ...
James Joyce, a life of the innovative Irish novelist who died in 1941, was published to international acclaim in 1959. The validity of its findings, and the prestige of its author, Richard Ellmann, ...
Higgins explains why it makes perfect sense for Buffalo to be the home of the future James Joyce Museum, even though it's a city he had no connection to in his lifetime.
Ellmann, the Boswell to Joyce’s Dr. Johnson, was a Jewish academic who taught mainly at Northwestern and Oxford. “James Joyce” was published in 1959, meaning that Ellmann, who died in 1987, enjoyed ...
James Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’ Is on Trial Once More — in a New Play About the 20th Century’s Greatest Novel Judge Woolsey’s ruling that the literary landmark could be admitted to America marks a watershed ...
Richard Ellmann’s “James Joyce” is widely regarded as the greatest literary biography of the 20th century, much as some see Joyce’s novel “Ulysses,” published in 1922, as its supreme ...
A recent entry in the visitor’s book of the James Joyce Tower & Museum in Sandycove, Dublin, perplexed the Friends of Joyce’s Tower, the volunteers who run the museum. The entry, reproduced as ...
Elevator Repair Service's stage adaptation of 'Ulysses,' presented by UCLA's Center for the Art of Performance, inspires a rereading of the James Joyce classic. Years later, the takeaways are ...
Though I’ve not lived here for a lifetime, I resonate deeply with Joyce’s sentiment of wanting to be able to immortalize a place in words.
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