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Ulysses100

Top 10 Dirtiest Parts of James Joyce’s Ulysses

Are the “dirty” parts still enough to shock us after 100 years?

Dr. Casey Lawrence
24 min readFeb 1, 2022

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Perhaps the first painting of Joyce’s Ulysses, “Jerry” by Paul Cadmus, 1931, is a portrait of Cadmus’ lover Jerry French holding the iconic blue-covered 1922 first edition. The book is here a symbol of illicit or illegal sexuality.

James Joyce’s Ulysses turns 100 tomorrow!

Although it is now considered a literary classic and is a common feature of those “100 books to read before you die” lists, Joyce’s 1922 novel was once considered too obscene to print. Joyce had already struggled to find a publisher for his much-cleaner book of short stories, Dubliners, for refusing to edit out a few well-placed curse words. By the time he began writing Ulysses, Joyce was fed up with the Victorian sensibilities of his contemporaries as the world entered a new age; the horrors of the First World War and mass death from the Spanish Flu were fresh wounds, and there was no longer, in Joyce’s eyes, any use quibbling over a swear word or body parts. Ulysses began with no holes barred — in episode one, a naked young man jumps into “the scrotumtightening sea” [1] — and from there only gets bolder.

Installments of Ulysses were published in two literary magazines: The Little Review and The Egoist. Only a few episodes appeared in the London-based magazine The Egoist in 1919 before British printers began refusing to typeset the novel in any form. The Little Review, a Chicago-based subscription-only Avant Garde magazine…

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Dr. Casey Lawrence
Dr. Casey Lawrence

Written by Dr. Casey Lawrence

Canadian author of three LGBT YA novels. PhD from Trinity College Dublin. Check out my lists for stories by genre/type.

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