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James JoyceA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
James Augustine Aloysius Joyce was born in Dublin, Ireland, on February 2, 1882. He was the oldest of 10 surviving children born into a middle-class Roman Catholic family that saw their social and economic standing steadily decline during his childhood. Joyce’s mother, Mary Jane, died in 1903, less than a year after he graduated from the Royal University of Ireland. His father, John Stanislaus Joyce, already known as an idler and a drinker, slipped further into alcoholism. Within a year, the 22-year-old James left Ireland for good.
In October 1904, Joyce and the woman who would become his partner for the rest of his life, Nora Barnacle, moved from Dublin to the European Continent. It was there, during stays in Zürich, Trieste, Rome, Paris, and other European cities, that Joyce wrote the vast majority of his works, although the stories were always set in and primarily concerning Dublin. Joyce had a lot to say about the state of Ireland’s political, religious, and cultural identity, and the stories that he wrote for Dubliners were among his earliest attempts to showcase the best and worst of Irish life at the beginning of the 20th century.
“An Encounter,” the second story in Dubliners, was completed in 1905, toward the middle of Joyce’s writing process for the collection.
By James Joyce
A Painful Case
James Joyce
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
James Joyce
Araby
James Joyce
Clay
James Joyce
Counterparts
James Joyce
Dubliners
James Joyce
Eveline
James Joyce
Finnegans Wake
James Joyce
Ivy Day in the Committee Room
James Joyce
The Boarding House
James Joyce
The Dead
James Joyce
The Sisters
James Joyce
Two Gallants
James Joyce
Ulysses
James Joyce