On his fortieth birthday, James Joyce held the first printed copy of a book that would redraw the possibilities of the novel. Ulysses arrived in Paris on February 2, 1922 C.E., published by the American bookseller Sylvia Beach through her Left Bank shop Shakespeare and Company. Few books since have matched its ambition, and fewer still its afterlife.
The modernist novel followed three Dubliners through a single ordinary day — June 16, 1904 — and turned that day into an epic.
What the publication brought
- Modernist novel: Ulysses mapped the inner life of ordinary people with a depth and precision fiction had not attempted before.
- Stream of consciousness: Joyce’s prose recorded thought as it actually moves — fragmented, associative, interrupted by sensation and memory.
- Homeric frame: Eighteen episodes loosely paralleled Homer’s Odyssey, recasting Odysseus as Leopold Bloom, a Jewish advertising canvasser walking through Dublin.
How the book came to exist
Joyce began Ulysses in 1914 while living in Trieste, continued in Zurich during the First World War, and finished in Paris. Parts appeared in the American journal The Little Review between 1918 and 1920, until a U.S. court ruled the “Nausicaa” episode obscene and stopped serialization.
No commercial publisher in Britain or the United States would touch the full novel. Sylvia Beach, an American expatriate who ran Shakespeare and Company, offered to print it herself.
She found a printer in Dijon, managed subscriptions, and shepherded the book through dozens of proof revisions as Joyce kept rewriting. Her role was closer to patron than bookseller, and without her the novel might have waited years longer to appear in full.
What readers found inside
Ulysses chronicled Leopold Bloom’s wanderings through Dublin, the younger writer Stephen Dedalus searching for a kind of father, and Molly Bloom’s long unpunctuated meditation that closes the book. Each episode used a different prose style — newspaper headlines, legal catechism, musical fugue, the evolution of English itself.
The critic T. S. Eliot called Joyce’s method “a way of controlling, of ordering, of giving a shape and significance to the immense panorama of futility and anarchy which is contemporary history.” Declan Kiberd later wrote that before Joyce, no writer of fiction had so foregrounded the process of thinking.
The book treated antisemitism, sexuality, British rule in Ireland, and Catholicism without flinching or moralizing.
Lasting impact
Ulysses opened a door that writers have been walking through ever since. Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner, Samuel Beckett, Clarice Lispector, Ralph Ellison, and later novelists from Salman Rushdie to countless contemporary authors worked in terrain Joyce charted — interior monologue, mythic structure layered under ordinary life, language pushed to the edge of legibility.
The book also helped shift what literature was allowed to say. After a landmark 1933 C.E. ruling by Judge John M. Woolsey in United States v. One Book Called Ulysses, American courts began treating serious artistic intent as a defense against obscenity charges. That decision reshaped how publishers approached work by D. H. Lawrence, Henry Miller, Allen Ginsberg, and others in the decades that followed.
Fans still gather each June 16 in Dublin and cities around the world for Bloomsday, reading the book aloud in pubs, on streets, along the coast where Bloom walked.
Blindspots and limits
Ulysses is famously difficult, and that difficulty has real costs. Generations of readers have been intimidated away from a book Joyce himself said contained “not one single serious line.” Late in life, Joyce admitted to Samuel Beckett that he “may have over-systematized” it, and critics including Edmund Wilson argued that the elaborate Homeric scaffolding sometimes substituted pattern for feeling. The novel’s treatment of women — particularly the construction of Molly Bloom’s closing monologue by a male author — has drawn sustained and fair scrutiny. And the text itself remains contested, with scholars still arguing over which edition best represents what Joyce actually wrote.
Why it still matters
A century on, Ulysses remains a reminder that an ordinary day contains more than any single account can hold. Joyce took one Dublin Thursday and found in it grief, desire, boredom, politics, music, prayer, digestion, memory, and love — the full weather of being alive.
That the book exists at all is thanks to a small bookshop run by a woman who believed in it when the publishing world did not.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Ulysses (novel) — Wikipedia
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