In an interview for Ransom Center Magazine, Dr. Clare Hutton explores how the exhibition, Women and the Making of Joyce’s Ulysses, investigates the important and largely unacknowledged role of women in helping Joyce’s novel gain widespread notoriety and success—including Margaret Anderson, Jane Heap, Harriet Shaw Weaver, and Sylvia Beach.
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Women and the Making of Joyce’s Ulysses: A History in Ten Objects #10
#10: Page 709 of the final corrected page proofs of Ulysses (1922), James Joyce Collection, Harry Ransom Center by CLARE HUTTON This is the tenth article in a series devoted to objects that tell the story of women who supported author James Joyce and the publication of his landmark novel,… read more
Women and the Making of Joyce’s Ulysses: A History in Ten Objects #9
#9: A single page from Helen Joyce’s “Portrait of the Artist by his Daughter-in-law,” begun in 1955. James Joyce Collection, Harry Ransom Center, 7.3 by CLARE HUTTON This is the ninth article in a series devoted to objects that tell the story of women who supported author James Joyce and… read more