James Joyce statue in Trieste, Italy where the Dubliner lived for a period of his life. Image: Shutterstock/Gimas James Joyce statue in Trieste, Italy where the Dubliner lived for a period of his life. Image: Shutterstock/Gimas COUNCILLORS ON DUBLIN City Council have put forward a motion to have the remains of writer James Joyce and his wife Nora Barnacle repatriated to Ireland ahead of the centenary of Ulysses’s publication.
“Joyce’s widow had said that she wanted to be repatriated when he died but for political reasons that never happened,” Lacey explained. Joyce had a fraught relationship with Ireland and the Catholic church, and spent much of his life living abroad in places like Paris and Zurich. His most famous work, Ulysses, was essentially banned in Ireland and the UK for what was perceived as explicit scenes in the novel.
“I am on two minds about this. I tried to get it off the ground about 40 or 50 years ago but it didn’t get anywhere and it is only bones after all. And when we dug up Yeats’ they got the wrong person.
Something seriously wrong here. Your article says he died in 1904 yet Ulysses was published in 1922. Sean McBride was not Minister for External Affairs in either of the cited years. Typo or sloppy sub-editing?
Let them rest in peace. If he'd wanted to be buried in Ireland he would have said so while alive.
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Source: IrishTimes - 🏆 3. / 98 Read more »
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