The Literature Book

(ff) #1

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the story of Stephen Dedalus gaining
the confidence to liberate his talents
from the conformist pressures of the
Catholic Church, his upbringing,
and country. In Ulysses, Stephen is
first shown in the morning, verbally
jousting with cynical quasi-friend
Buck Mulligan, in the tower where
they live on Sandycove. He thinks
back to his mother on her deathbed
and guiltily reflects on his refusal,
on atheistic principle, to pray for
her. He then teaches a history
lesson and walks on the beach.
The novel then shifts back in
time to 8 am and enters full “stream-
of-consciousness” mode as the reader
follows Leopold Bloom planning
breakfast at home, shopping at the
butcher’s, and then cooking the
meal and taking a tray upstairs to
Molly. Joyce uses stream of

consciousness to varying degrees
to relate the experiences of Stephen,
Bloom, and Molly, although to move
the action forward in any particular
passage, he skillfully interweaves
stream of consciousness and third-
person narrative.

Bloom and the real world
Naturalism, or “scientific” realism,
had become the lifeblood of the
novel in mid-19th-century France,
especially in the fiction of Émile
Zola, who presented life’s seamier
aspects in meticulous detail. Later
French writers such as Henri
Barbusse, in Under Fire (1916),
deployed brutal realism to describe
the appalling horrors of World War I.
Ulysses, which Joyce began
writing in 1915, belongs to this
tradition of novelistic candor—

ULYSSES


although Joyce’s spiritual ancestor
was less Zola, whose naturalism
was pessimistic and didactic, than
Zola’s 16th-century compatriot
François Rabelais—a writer whose
broad comedy and fascination with
the excesses of the carnival Ulysses
parallels in certain sections.
Leopold Bloom is one of the
most fully realized characters in
all fiction. He is what the French
call “un homme moyen sensuel”—
an average man with the usual
appetites—intelligent but far
from intellectual. He has a genial
character and shows a liking
for comfort and a desire to avoid
confrontation. When he is first
introduced, the easy relationship
he enjoys with his own bodily
functions and with at least some
people within his social milieu sets

The numbers on the
map plot the events
of June 16, 1904

1
2

1

3
13

14
9

8

5

(^716)
12
10
6
4
17 18
11
15
The 18 episodes of Ulysses in Dublin
8 am The Tower
10 am The School
11 am The Strand
12 noon
The Newspaper
1 pm The Lunch
2 pm The Library
3 pm The Streets
4 pm The
Concert Room
5 pm The
Tavern
8 pm The Rocks
10 pm The Hospital
12 midnight
The Brothel
1 am The Shelter
8 am, 2 am
The House, The Bed
RIVER (^) LI
FFEY
2 The School:
Stephen walks from the
Tower, where he lives,
to Mr. Deasy’s School in
Dalkey to teach a lesson.
4, 17, 18 The House:
“Bloomsday” starts and
ends at Leopold and
Molly Bloom’s house,
No. 7 Eccles Street.
5 The Bath:
Wandering in a drowsily
complacent state, Bloom
picks up a letter, then
heads to the Turkish baths.
6 The Graveyard:
Bloom and three friends
share a carriage for the
funeral procession from
Paddy Dignam’s House.
7 The Newspaper:
Stephen and Bloom cross
paths, as Bloom chases
advertising and Stephen
places Mr. Deasy’s letter.
10 am The Bath
11 am The Graveyard
10 The Streets:
In this central episode,
19 characters pursue
mini-odysseys through
the streets of Dublin.
12 The Tavern:
Bloom is accosted by an
Irish nationalist “citizen”
when he stops for a drink
in Barney Kiernan’s pub.
14 The Hospital:
A group of drunken men,
among them Bloom and
Stephen, wait for Mina
Purefoy to give birth.
15 The Brothel:
After a hallucinatory
walk through Nighttown,
Bloom and Stephen meet
in a brothel.
16 The Shelter:
Bloom and Stephen take
refuge in a cabman’s
shelter. Fellowship is soon
undermined as the gulf
between their views
becomes apparent.
US_214-221_Ulysses.indd 218 08/10/2015 13:08

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