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Why should you read James Joyce's "Ulysses"? - Sam Slote

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James Joyce's “Ulysses” is widely considered to be both a literary masterpiece and one of the hardest works of literature to read. It inspires such devotion that once a year, thousands of people all over the world dress up like the characters, take to the streets, and read the book aloud. So what is it about this novel that inspires so many people? Sam Slote uncovers the allure of this epic tome.

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By the time James Joyce’s "Ulysses" was first published in 1922 it was already famous, or infamous. Censored in the US and the UK, it could only be published by a bookstore in Paris run by an expatriate American. George Slocombe, an early reviewer, called it “as large as a telephone directory or a family bible, and with many of the literary and social characteristics of each!” This touches on a good point: "Ulysses" has elements and aspects that are both richly symbolic and highly documentarian.

Joyce is trying to write an encyclopedia of all the different modalities of human experience. Through the story of a few people in Dublin on one day in 1904, he tries to suggest the entirety of all human experience, and in this way the book’s realism and its symbolism could be viewed as two sides of the same coin. By precisely delineating the activities of a group of specific people in a specific place at a specific time, he aims to suggest all the things that we all do.

"Ulysses" has 18 chapters and each one has a series of symbols and correspondences that Joyce mapped out on what is called a schema. The schema lists for each chapter a corresponding art, color, symbol, technic, and Homeric parallel. The schema is a good starting place for reading the text, but it’s only a starting place since it can also be a bit limiting. Don’t worry if you can’t see everything on the list in the book. Michael Groden has a very good chapter-by-chapter breakdown on his website.

A little knowledge about Dublin can help since the novel is so deeply tied into the city. Some students at Boston College have put together an online project that documents the various characters’ itineraries throughout the book. Another site gathers together contemporaneous photographs and pictures to illustrate "Ulysses."

Because of its sheer volume, the world of Joyce criticism can seem intimidating. Michael Groden has compiled a good bibliography, with an emphasis on "Ulysses." Some classic texts of Joyce criticism can be found online; Frank Budgen’s book James Joyce and the Making of “Ulysses” is a very good guide for first-time readers.

Because of the difficult circumstances of its first publication, the first edition of "Ulysses" was greatly flawed. Subsequent editions are not immune from problems either; an account of the different editions of "Ulysses" can be found here. The text of the first edition along with some excellent lectures can be found as part of the Modernist Versions Project “Year of Ulysses”.

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Meet The Creators

  • Educator Sam Slote
  • Director Carol Freeman
  • Illustrator Carol Freeman, Katie Sherlock
  • Animator Chris McLoughlin
  • Composer Chris McLoughlin
  • Associate Producer Jessica Ruby
  • Content Producer Gerta Xhelo
  • Editorial Producer Alex Rosenthal
  • Narrator Adrian Dannatt

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