Clever, Very: Judith Paltin

For our latest installment of “Clever, Very,” we interviewed Dr. Judith Paltin about her article “Music, Intermediality, and Shock in Ulysses.” Dr. Paltin is an assistant professor in the Department of English Language and Literatures at the University of British Columbia (Vancouver) and co-chair of UBC’s Faculty of Arts program in Critical Studies in Sexuality….Continue Reading Clever, Very: Judith Paltin

Issue 53.3-4

PERSPECTIVES Interview with Simon O’Connor, Director of the Ulysses Center “A Postcard from Zurich”: A Report on the 2017 Zurich James Joyce Foundation Workshop, Zurich, Switzerland, 30 July – 5 August 2017 Yaeli Greenblat “Getting Wind of a New Opening”: Joyce in the Digital Age Conference, Columbia University, New York, 1 October 2017 Caleb Derven…Continue Reading Issue 53.3-4

James Joyce Center Summer Lecture Series

The James Joyce Centre, in Dublin, has announced their 2018 lecture series. It will feature a diverse assortment of speakers and will cover a range of topics from microbiology, to legal studies, and Joyce’s personal relationships. Dedicated readers of the JJQ might recognize Jonathan Goldman’s Joyce & the Law which grew out of a special edition of the JJQ–  Joyce…Continue Reading James Joyce Center Summer Lecture Series

Volume 53.1-2

PERSPECTIVES “Forging New Paths”: A Report on “Irish Modernisms: Gaps, Conjectures, Possibilities,” University of Vienna, 29 September-1 October 2016 Daniel Curran “Academic Trekkies”: A Report on “Diasporic Joyce,” The International North American James Joyce Conference, Toronto, Canada, 21-25 June 2017  Layne M. Farmen “Shortest Way Home”: A Report on the Dublin James Joyce Summer School,…Continue Reading Volume 53.1-2

JJQ Welcomes Two New Board Members

A black and white etching that shows a woman in a dress at the top of stairs in the upper right corner. Her body faces the viewer with her head looking to the left. At the bottom of the stairs in the rear view of a man in a black top hat looking up at her. We can only see the back of his head.

The James Joyce Quarterly is delighted to welcome two new members to its international Editorial Advisory Board: Dr. John Nash and Dr. Jolanta Wawrzycka. Both are distinguished experts in the field and will bring to the board some new expertise in established and emerging areas like translation, reception studies, and literary history. Nash currently teaches…Continue Reading JJQ Welcomes Two New Board Members

Call For Papers: The 26th Annual James Joyce Symposium

Between 11 and 16 June 2018, the University of Antwerp’s Centre for Manuscript Genetics will host the 26th International James Joyce Symposium in the city that Joyce and his family visited in the summer of 1926. Belgium is small, so much so that all of the sites Joyce toured that year (Ostend, Bruges, Ghent, Brussels and, most…Continue Reading Call For Papers: The 26th Annual James Joyce Symposium

Clever, Very: Matthew Hayward

For this “Clever, Very” interview, Matthew Hayward spoke with us about his scholarship regarding the way in which Joyce collected information on commerce in his article, “‘Knowing Damn All About Banking Business’: Re-opening James Joyce’s ‘Notes on Business and Commerce’” which appears in the latest issue of the JJQ (52.3). Dr. Matthew Hayward is currently a Lecturer in…Continue Reading Clever, Very: Matthew Hayward

Joyce in 100 Objects: How to Enjoy Ulysses

A portrait of James Joyce with a brief explanation of the structure of Ulysses

In 1920, Ulysses was effectively banned from publication in the United States when a New York court held that the serialized version then appearing in The Little Review was obscene.  For the next thirteen years, the book remained in limbo, until another New York court finally ruled it a piece of literature that was unlikely to…Continue Reading Joyce in 100 Objects: How to Enjoy Ulysses

The “Ulysses” Contest: A Creative Writing Competition

The “Ulysses” Contest: A Creative Writing Competition Sponsored by the James Joyce Quarterly Overview In September 1906, James Joyce finished work on “Grace,” one of the very last stories he drafted for what would become Dubliners.  He then wrote to his brother Stanislaus that he was toying with an idea for one more tale.  This…Continue Reading The “Ulysses” Contest: A Creative Writing Competition