James Joyce: Ulysses
$360
In Homer’s Odyssey, it takes Ulysses ten years to return home to Ithaca after the end of the Trojan War. The trip is quicker in James Joyce’s Ulysses (1922)— a single day—but, as in its Homeric antecedent, an aging hero must wander in search of home but, unlike Homer’s hero, his journey is limited to a single day.
And what a day it is! Sharp and funny descriptions of Dublin, dazzling innovations to the very possibilities of the English language, and nuanced (if often obscure) engagements with literature and history transform an ordinary June 16th into the stuff of legend. Bloom’s path sometimes crosses, sometimes aligns with the one taken by Stephen Daedalus, familiar from Joyce’s earlier work A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Although the third main character Molly Bloom, Leopold’s wife, never leaves home, thoughts of her haunt his travels.
Joyce doesn’t mention Homer in Ulysses, although the serial version, published in The Little Review (1918–1920), assigned Homeric titles to the episodes (removed in the full version). So, even if he wavered as to the extent of the relationship between the works, it remains true that both works are “beautifully all embracing” in their “vision of human concerns.” In writing Ulysses, Joyce explores what such concerns look like from the perspective of a decidedly non-heroic modernity, likewise trying to find a way back from a grueling and pointless war.
With Chritopher Nolan’s “The Odyssey” providing a cinematic version of Homer’s epic, what better time to join Joyce in his rethinking of Homer’s powerful story of disillusion, desire, and the always pressing question of how to find a way home. In this eight-week Delve, we’ll work our way through Ulysses, exploring these characters’ stories, Joyce’s prose, early twentieth-century Dublin, and the many other stories and histories woven into this extraordinary novel.
Text:
Ullysses by James Joyce
Access Program
We want our writing classes and seminars to be accessible to everyone, regardless of income and background. We understand that our tuition structure can present obstacles for some people. Our Access Program offers writing class and seminar tuitions at a reduced rate. Most writing classes have at least one access spot available.
Please apply here for access rate tuition. Contact Susan Moore at susan@literary-arts.org if you have questions.
Liaison position
Every in-person class and seminar at Literary Arts has one liaison position. Liaisons perform specific duties for each class meeting. If you are a liaison for a class or seminar, the full amount of your tuition is covered by Literary Arts.
Apply here for the liaison position.
Elizabeth Duquette
Elizabeth Duquette has been teaching nineteenth-century literature for more than twenty years, formerly at Gettysburg College and now sometimes at Portland State University. She is an editor for American Art, and the author of American Tyrannies in the Long Age of Napoleon (2023) and Loyal Subjects: Bonds of Nation, Race, and Allegiance in Nineteenth-Century America.

