This item is a packet complied by the National Library of Ireland in 1982 to celebrate the centenary year of the birth of James Joyce. The red folder has a black imprint of Joyce stamped on the cover and includes various facsimile documents from the National Library of Ireland, as well as other universities around the world that hold Joyce collections. One page is a chronology of Joyce ranging from 1882-1941, but other pages show photographs of Joyce, his family, places he lived, school records, publication notices, and related historical photographs.
This item is a program/poster created by the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London for a Joyce exhibition held from June 14 - July 12, 1950. The program lists the items in the exhibit, small sections of text that describe Joyce and his life, and includes various photographs of Joyce.
This calendar was created by HCE Publications and Ena Press in 1981. For each month, artist Alice Price created illustrations relating to a Joycean delight. Each month is written as a Joycean pun, such as "Januarious," "Febrewery," "Marracks," "Alebrill," "Mei," "Junipery," "Yuly," "Aweghost," "Saptimber," "Hogsober," "Novembrance," and "Decemberer." The calendar was edited by Suzanne Marriage and designed by Bill Wheeler.
This item is a postcard of James Joyce illustrated by Henry J. Sharpe in 1982. This illustration is one of 16 illustrations by Sharpe from the book Joyce A Clew written by Mairead Byrne. The illustration depicts the older Joyce as a puppeteer to the younger Joyce.
Joyce's Stephen Hero from 1944, published posthumously. Stephen Hero was an early draft of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and thus both focus on the autobiographical character of Stephen Dedalus.
This is a first edition, first printing of Joyce's Ulysses from 1922. It is numbered 754 out of the 1000 that were printed and was bought in March 1922 from Sylvia Beach's Shakespeare and Company bookstore in Paris by Sir Roderick Jones.
This item is a black and white illustration of a scene from Joyce's Ulysses drawn by Pat Cooke. On the back is a list of the other illustrations Cooke created, along with quotes from the Bodley Head 1960 edition of Ulysses.