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Ellman's Joyce: The Biography of the Masterpiece and its Maker

Ellman's Joyce: The Biography of the Masterpiece and its Maker

Join us to celebrate Zachary Leader's new book, "Ellmann's Joyce: The Biography of the Masterpiece and its Maker." Reception with beer and wine to follow. Leader is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Roehampton.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
Richard Ellmann’s James Joyce, published in 1959, was hailed by Anthony Burgess as “the greatest literary biography of the twentieth century.” Frank Kermode thought the book would “fix Joyce’s image for a generation,” a prediction that was if anything too cautious. The biography won the National Book Award and durably secured Joyce’s standing as a preeminent modernist.

Ellmann’s Joyce provides the biography of the biography, exploring how Ellmann came to his subject, gained the cooperation of Joyce’s family and estate, shrewdly, doggedly collected vital papers and interviews, placated publishers, thwarted competitors, and carefully balanced narrative with literary analysis. Ellmann’s Joyce also removes the veil from the biographer—richly rewarded in public, admirable in private life, but also possessed of a startling secret life. An eminent biographer himself, Zachary Leader constructs a powerful argument not only in support of Ellmann’s intellectual and artistic claims but also on behalf of literary biography generally. In the process, he takes readers on a rare tour through midcentury publishing houses in New York and London, as well as the corridors and classrooms of elite universities, from Yale to Oxford. The influence of Ellmann’s book, recognized instantly, persists to this day, among literary scholars and Joyce fans alike.

Filled with surprising details, tales of intrigue from the heyday of literary publishing, and intimate portraits of the Joyce and Ellmann families, Ellmann’s Joyce is as immersive as a walk around town with Leopold Bloom and as moving as the thickly drifted snow on Michael Furey’s grave.

101 Archer
07:00 PM - 08:30 PM on Thu, 17 Apr 2025

Event Supported By

Oklahoma Center for the Humanities
humanities@utulsa.edu
101 Archer
101 E Archer St
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74104
918-631-4419
humanities@utulsa.edu