Sujet : Re: Bloomsday (16 June)
De : benlizro (at) *nospam* ihug.co.nz (Ross Clark)
Groupes : sci.langDate : 16. Jun 2024, 22:27:05
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v4nlbf$80f4$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2
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On 16/06/2024 12:49 p.m., HenHanna wrote:
On 6/15/2024 4:56 PM, Ross Clark wrote:
"This day celebrates the life and writing of Irish author James Joyce (1882-1941), chiefly be(by) retracing the route through Dublin taken by Leonard* Bloom, the central character in _Ulysses_....the action of the novel takes place entirely on a single day: 16 June 1904, which was also the day Joyce first went out with Nora Barnacle, whom he later married."
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*That's _Leopold_ Bloom! Two gaffes in two days! This book needed an editor.
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Bloomsday is a real thing. A few years ago I went to a Bloomsday celebration at a local "Irish pub" called the Dogs Bollix. Some professional readings, some amateur singings, and lots of drinkings. Good fun.
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When I briefly visited Pula, Croatia (at the southern tip of Istria) in 2009, I was surprised to see a life-size image* of JJ, seated at a table outside a local cafe. I knew he had lived in Trieste (which is not far away); but before that, for a few months 1904-5, he had a job in Pula (then called Pola), teaching English at the Berlitz School, mainly to Austro-Hungarian naval officers.
there is a pub (with Blue Tiles) that Joyce frequented in Trieste ?
Could well be. We were only in Trieste for a couple of hours, and weren't looking for a pub or for Joyceana. I seem to remember a bookshop named after him right at the railway station, but it doesn't seem to be there any more.
*I wanted to say "statue", but is it a statue if it's sitting? Sitting on a horse, OK, but sitting at a table, drinking coffee?
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"While he was in Pola he organised the local printing of his broadsheet The Holy Office, which satirised both William Butler Yeats and George William Russell,"
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Joyce
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pula
one theory (or story) is that... on their first date...
Nora went down on Jim... made him really happy.
I thought it was a hand job.